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Longterm usedvehicle loans risky says Jonathan Banks of NADA
Long-term used-vehicle loans risky, says Jonathan Banks of NADA.

Lengths of Used-Car Loans Increase

Financial institutions have accelerated their auto lending, in contrast to putting the brakes on much lending during the financial crisis of 2008-2009.

LAS VEGAS – Used-car loan terms are getting longer.

That’s in part because pre-owned vehicles are in demand today, keeping their residual values strong. They also last longer because of quality improvements in recent years compared with their relatively short-lived predecessors.

And lenders have become more competitive. Five-year loans on 4-year-old cars could come soon “because of high used-car prices and aggressive lenders,” says Ricky Beggs, managing editor of Black Book auto-pricing guide.     

Pre-owned vehicle loans typically are shorter than those for new cars. Financial institutions can balk at extending payback terms too far out for older vehicles that have been around the block more than a few times.

“Long-term used-vehicle loans are risky propositions,” says Jonathan Banks, an auto analyst for the National Automobile Dealers Assn. “They are like vehicle leasing; it’s a great tool until you go too deep.”

Led by banks, financial institutions have accelerated their auto lending, in contrast to putting the brakes on much lending during the financial crisis of 2008-2009.

“They are buying deeper to get greater market share,” says John Gray, Experian Automotive’s vice president-sales. “They are offering more-aggressive terms and attractive rates.”

The average prime rate on used-car loans is 5.5% compared with 3.7% for new vehicles, according to Experian. The subprime rate average for used cars is 13.1% vs. 8.5% for new vehicles.

“Banks are going after those longer used-car loans,” Banks says at the recent National Remarketing Conference here. “They are scooping up as many as they can. But if you have a 3-year-old vehicle and push the loan out five years, it’s an 8-year-old car by the end of the loan. There is a point where the depreciation becomes rapid.”

When that happens, the amount of the outstanding debt becomes substantially greater than the value of the vehicle. It’s a risky proposition for both borrower and lenders.

Today’s long-term lenders depend a lot on the greater reliability of today’s cars, because major maintenance problems can spark credit defaults, especially by at-risk borrowers. An adage of the business is that if a subprime customer’s car stops running, chances are the payments will stop, too.

Consumers who opt for longer loan terms tend to have lower credit scores, Gray notes.

In first half 2011, the average credit score was 709 for people with a 73- to 84-month auto loan, according to Experian. In 2009, the average score was 730.  

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