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Friday, January 30, 2015

PA Auto Show begins today; 7 hot cars to see this year - PennLive.com

Today, Jan. 29, is the opening day of the 2015 Pennsylvania Auto Show, which kicks off at 1 p.m. at the Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex and Expo Center on Cameron St. in Harrisburg.

The PA Auto Show is the go-to event in central Pennsylvania for those looking to see the latest car models. It offers chances to go on test drives as well as opportunities to buy used vehicles.

But when it comes to the PA Auto Show, a lot of the fun comes from just gawking at the hot rides on display. Click through the gallery above to see seven worth drooling over, and read on to learn a bit more on each.

BMW i8 - $136,650 Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price

Sometimes you just have to drool... and when it comes to the BMWi8 it's hard not to. This hybrid sports car features scissor doors and an aerodynamic design. Oh and there's a Louis Vuitton luggage set just for this car because, why not?

BMW i3 - $42,300 Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price

The ads for this car have been making the rounds on the Internet thanks to their soon-to-be Super Bowl home. It's all-electric and features opposing doors and no centre tunnel making it much more spacious than cars of a similar size. 

2015 Chevy Colorado - $20,995 Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price

Truck fans won't want to miss the 2015 Chevy Colorado, Motor Trend's Truck of the Year. It's small but mighty with plenty of horse power.

2015 Dodge Challenger SRT with Hemi Hellcat Engine - $41,480 Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price

Few cars are sexier than this muscle number. The Dodge Challenger SRT has 707 horsepower and really, do you need any more information? This is a car for those who want to go fast, hug curves and push their vehicle to the limits

2015 Ford F150 - $30,675 Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price

The Ford 150 has changed how people look at cars. It emphasizes fuel efficiency with Ford's eco-boost engine.  The aluminum alloy body coupled with a steel frame keeps the car light, yet strong. It's's payload can haul up to 3,300 pounds too, which is definitely nothing to scoff at.

2016 Kia Sorento - $25,795 Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price

The 2016 model features a radical redesign, giving it a more sculpted look. It also includes multiple drive-assist features, including a surround view monitor and lane departure warning system. 

2015 VW Golf - $19,815 Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price

Motor Trend's Car of the Year boasts a solid power train and a nice price tag ($19,815 base price for the standard model). Some models even feature a forward-collison warning system, which earned it a top safety pick status for the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

Details: 1-9 p.m Jan. 29, 10 a.m-9 p.m , 10 a.m-9 p.m Jan. 30-31, 10 a.m-5 p.m Feb. 1 at the Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex, 2301 N. Cameron St. Harrisburg. Cost: $8 for adults, $6 for seniors, $6 for military with ID, $3 for children 7-12, and free for children 6 and under. http://autoshowharrisburg.com/

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Source : http://www.pennlive.com/entertainment/index.ssf/2015/01/pa_auto_show_begins_today_7_ca.html

Prankster 'damages' Detroit auto show vehicles - The Detroit News

Want to cause mischief at an auto show? There's an app for that, as a number of product specialist models and attendees of the Detroit auto show found out.

Dennis Roady, a full-time YouTube prankster, caused a stir during the industry preview with a mobile app called "Dude, your car!" The mobile app allows users to morph photos of cars to make it look like they are scratched, dented, wheel clamped or even on fire. He then showed the images to people at the show, and secretly recorded their reactions.

"It was a perfect prank for that venue," said the Cincinnati resident during a phone interview Thursday. "I was doing it the whole day there. Everybody was laughing it off."

Roady, 31, was originally hired by a Russian YouTube channel to review cars at the Detroit auto show, but couldn't pass up the opportunity for a prank as well. He posted a video of his menacing deeds on his "howtoPRANKitup" YouTube channel on Jan. 24.

The three-minute video has received more than 250,000 views. It features everything from Roady "scratching" a Mercedes-Maybach S600 and Audi R8, to putting a fake dent in the side of the Dodge Challenger T/A Concept.

When he showed the image of the dented Challenger to one female product specialist in the Dodge booth, she held her hand to her mouth in shock, and ran to the car. "Her reaction gave the energy back into the prank," Roady said. "That's the reaction I was hoping for."

NAIAS spokesman Joe Rohatynski said show officials do not condone the prank.

Roady, a former UPS factory worker, started the YouTube channel about a year ago after working with comedian Roman Atwood and his well-known YouTube prank channel, RomanAtwood.

Roady's how-to-prank YouTube channel has nearly 40 videos — ranging from ways to prank with food to the best prank apps.

Thanks to the best prank apps video, which included the car-pranking app, as well as the video from the Detroit auto show, Roady said he is now working with Mobilaga, developer of the app, on a new pranking app compatible with Apple and Android products.

"It was very funny," said Mobilaga founder Alex Attarian when asked about the auto show prank video. "We have a lot of people now posting stuff on YouTube."

Attarian, 35, of Sacremento, Calif., said hundreds of thousands of people have downloaded the app since it launched in March 2010. He confirmed the company is working on another app that incorporates more pranks.

"Dude, your car!" is compatible with mobile Apple products with iOS 5.0 or later. The app is available for 99 cents at the iTunes app store.

mwayland@detroitnews.com

(313) 222-2504

Watch it

To watch the prank video, go to youtube.com/howtoprankitup

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Source : http://www.detroitnews.com/story/business/autos/detroit-auto-show/2015/01/29/prankster-detroit-auto-show/22525203/

Maryville auto shop goes up in flames - KSDK

MARYVILLE, Ill. – An auto shop in Maryville went up in flames Thursday afternoon.

The fire started at Andy's Auto Body on Schiber Court around 1:00 p.m. Firefighters say a car was coming out of the paint room and a couple of sparks flew, which started the blaze.

At least five different fire departments responded to the call. Firefighters said they had difficulties because some materials inside the building caused explosions and the fire got extremely hot because the building was made out of sheet metal.

Four cars were damaged in the fire, including a 1940s Ford that was being restored.

The building has been deemed a total loss.

No one was injured in the fire.

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Source : http://www.ksdk.com/story/news/local/2015/01/29/andys-auto-body-fire-maryville-piper/22536913/

Prankster 'damages' Detroit auto show vehicles - The Detroit News

Want to cause mischief at an auto show? There's an app for that, as a number of product specialist models and attendees of the Detroit auto show found out.

Dennis Roady, a full-time YouTube prankster, caused a stir during the industry preview with a mobile app called "Dude, your car!" The mobile app allows users to morph photos of cars to make it look like they are scratched, dented, wheel clamped or even on fire. He then showed the images to people at the show, and secretly recorded their reactions.

"It was a perfect prank for that venue," said the Cincinnati resident during a phone interview Thursday. "I was doing it the whole day there. Everybody was laughing it off."

Roady, 31, was originally hired by a Russian YouTube channel to review cars at the Detroit auto show, but couldn't pass up the opportunity for a prank as well. He posted a video of his menacing deeds on his "howtoPRANKitup" YouTube channel on Jan. 24.

The three-minute video has received more than 250,000 views. It features everything from Roady "scratching" a Mercedes-Maybach S600 and Audi R8, to putting a fake dent in the side of the Dodge Challenger T/A Concept.

When he showed the image of the dented Challenger to one female product specialist in the Dodge booth, she held her hand to her mouth in shock, and ran to the car. "Her reaction gave the energy back into the prank," Roady said. "That's the reaction I was hoping for."

NAIAS spokesman Joe Rohatynski said show officials do not condone the prank.

Roady, a former UPS factory worker, started the YouTube channel about a year ago after working with comedian Roman Atwood and his well-known YouTube prank channel, RomanAtwood.

Roady's how-to-prank YouTube channel has nearly 40 videos — ranging from ways to prank with food to the best prank apps.

Thanks to the best prank apps video, which included the car-pranking app, as well as the video from the Detroit auto show, Roady said he is now working with Mobilaga, developer of the app, on a new pranking app compatible with Apple and Android products.

"It was very funny," said Mobilaga founder Alex Attarian when asked about the auto show prank video. "We have a lot of people now posting stuff on YouTube."

Attarian, 35, of Sacremento, Calif., said hundreds of thousands of people have downloaded the app since it launched in March 2010. He confirmed the company is working on another app that incorporates more pranks.

"Dude, your car!" is compatible with mobile Apple products with iOS 5.0 or later. The app is available for 99 cents at the iTunes app store.

mwayland@detroitnews.com

(313) 222-2504

Watch it

To watch the prank video, go to youtube.com/howtoprankitup

Read or Share this story: http://detne.ws/1KbCBQp

Recommended article: Chomsky: We Are All – Fill in the Blank.
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Source : http://www.detroitnews.com/story/business/autos/detroit-auto-show/2015/01/29/prankster-detroit-auto-show/22525203/

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Investment Riches Built on Subprime Auto Loans to Poor - New York Times

Photo
Dane Carpe, of Creswell, Ore., lost his 2008 Dodge Charger when he could not repay the $17,116 he borrowed at a 23.74 percent interest rate.Credit Carl Kiilsgaard for The New York Times

The loans were for used Dodges, Nissans and Chevrolets, many with tens of thousands of miles on the odometer, some more than a decade old.

They were also one of the hottest investments around.

So many asset managers clamored for a piece of a September bond deal made up of these loans that the size of the offering was increased 35 percent, to $1.35 billion. Even then, Santander Consumer USA received more than $1 billion in investor demand that it could not accommodate.

Driven Into Debt

Articles in this series are examining the boom in subprime auto loans.

Across the country, there is a booming business in lending to the working poor — those Americans with impaired credit who need cars to get to work. But this market is as much about Wall Street's perpetual demand for high returns as it is about used cars. An influx of investor money is making more loans possible, but all that money may also be enabling excessive risk-taking that could have repercussions throughout the financial system, analysts and regulators caution.

In a kind of alchemy that Wall Street has previously performed with mortgages, thousands of subprime auto loans are bundled together and sold as securities to investors, including mutual funds, insurance companies and hedge funds. By slicing and dicing the securities, any losses if borrowers default can be contained, in theory.

Led by companies like Santander Consumer; GM Financial, General Motors' lending unit; and Exeter Finance, an arm of the Blackstone Group, such securitizations have grown 302 percent, to $20.2 billion since 2010, according to Thomson Reuters IFR Markets. And even as rising delinquencies and other signs of stress in the market emerged last year, subprime securitizations increased 28 percent from 2013.

Taking On More Risk

Deals made up of auto loans to borrowers whom creditors deem riskier have increased since 2010.

Total subprime auto loan securitizations

The returns are substantial in a time of low interest rates. In the case of the Santander Consumer bond offering in September, which is backed by loans on more than 84,000 vehicles, some of the highest-rated notes yield more than twice as much as certain Treasury securities, but are just as safe, according to ratings firms.

Now questions are being raised about whether this hot Wall Street market is contributing to a broad loosening of credit standards across the subprime auto industry. A review by The New York Times of dozens of court records, and interviews with two dozen borrowers, credit analysts, legal aid lawyers and investors, show that some of the companies, which package and sell the loans, are increasingly enabling people at the extreme financial margins to obtain loans to buy cars.

The intense demand for subprime auto securities may also be fueling a more troubling development: a rise in loans that contain falsified income or employment information. The Justice Department in Washington is coordinating an investigation among prosecutors' offices across the country into whether such faulty information ended up in securitization deals, according to people briefed on the inquiries.

The examinations, which began this summer after a front-page article in The Times reported on potential abuses in subprime auto lending, are modeled on the federal investigation into the sale of mortgage-backed securities — an effort that has already yielded billions of dollars of settlements.

Prosecutors have sent a spate of subpoenas. This summer, the office of Preet Bharara, the United States attorney for the Southern District of New York, sent subpoenas to Santander Consumer and GM Financial. The United States attorney in Detroit subpoenaed Ally Financial in December. And Consumer Portfolio Services, a subprime lender, said last week in a regulatory filing that the company had received a subpoena related to its "subprime automotive finance and related securitization activities."

"There is so much money looking for a positive return that people get lazy," said Christopher L. Gillock, a managing director at Colonnade Advisors, a financial advisory firm in Chicago that has worked with subprime auto lenders. "Investors see it is rated triple-A, turn off their brains and buy into the paper."

Among the borrowers stoking the lending boom are people like Dana Payne.

Ms. Payne, a former administrative assistant in the New York Police City Department, has not made a single payment on a $30,770 Santander loan that was taken out to buy a 2011 BMW 328xi. Ms. Payne, who has no driver's license, said she took out the loan so her daughter, who lives in New Jersey, could have a car. The loan has an interest rate of 11.89 percent, according to her loan document, a copy of which was reviewed by The Times.

Ms. Payne went with her daughter to a dealership that arranges loans for Santander and other auto lenders to buy the car. She said an employee at the dealership in Great Neck, N.Y., assured her that, even though she was on food stamps, she could afford the loan. At the time, Ms. Payne said she thought she was co-signing the loan with her daughter.

"I looked him in the eye and said, 'I don't have any income,' " said Ms. Payne.

The dealership did not comment.

The lenders point out they are providing loans to people who might not otherwise be able to buy cars. They say they have acted to insulate investors from losses. In many bonds, lenders take the first losses when loans sour, a safeguard few mortgage deals contain.

"Subprime lending by its nature involves evaluating the creditworthiness and ability to repay of borrowers who may have had financial difficulties in the past, such as a bankruptcy, a foreclosure or difficulty in managing revolving credit," Stephen Jones, vice president investor relations at GM Financial, said in a statement.

The lenders say they vet their dealer partners, watching for patterns of complaints against dealerships and other warning signs like higher than average defaults.

Laurie Kight, vice president of communications at Santander Consumer, said in a statement that the lender has a "rigorous and active dealer control operation, which is part of the company's overall compliance framework." She added, "This operation audits, investigates and — if necessary — ceases operations with any dealers who conduct fraudulent or high-risk activities."

Investors are betting that the companies are experienced enough to weed out problem loans.

Still, some credit analysts have questioned whether the market has grown too much, too fast.

Some rating firms that faced criticism after the mortgage crisis for blessing shaky investments with top ratings are taking a critical approach to subprime auto deals.

Fitch Ratings will issue its highest ratings only to bonds issued by lenders with long track records and that don't rely entirely on securitizations to fund their business, like Santander Consumer and GM Financial. And Standard & Poor's has recently sounded alarms about the declining quality of the loans backing the investments.

Even those warnings, critics say, do not fully capture the fundamental risks.

Mr. Gillock, the financial adviser in Chicago, said that no bond made up of subprime auto loans should ever receive a triple-A rating — a designation that only three blue-chip companies, Exxon, Microsoft and Johnson & Johnson, receive on their debt offerings.

"It is hard for me to place securities backed by subprime auto finance receivables in the same category," he said.

Video

No Credit? No Problem

Banks and private equity firms searching for high-yield investments have fueled a boom in subprime auto loans to buyers who can't afford them, including those who recently filed for bankruptcy.

Video by Axel Gerdau and John Woo on Publish Date July 19, 2014.

If You Can't Beat Him . . .

The financial crisis provided an opportunity for subprime auto loan securitizations.

With the once-enormous market in mortgage-backed securities largely frozen, investors looked for new opportunities. One bright spot was auto lending. Even in the depths of the recession, people needed cars and were willing to pay steep rates for a loan.

Seizing upon this demand, private equity investors began scouring the country looking to acquire lenders or pools of auto loans that banks no longer wanted.

Time and again, however, the private equity firms found that a Texas firm headed by Tom Dundon, an auto finance veteran, had beaten them to the punch.

"We looked on with envy," said an executive at one of the private equity firms.

Mr. Dundon and a group of partners started the business that would become Santander Consumer in the 1990s, expanding the company — then called Drive Financial Services — from a regional lender in Texas into a national player operating in 35 states.

Drive Financial was known for lending to used-car customers that other lenders rejected. In industry parlance, the company went "deep" — meaning that it made loans to people far down on the credit spectrum.

"They were very popular with dealers because they were able to finance people that others could not," said Mark Peters, a longtime auto lending executive in Dallas, who is now senior vice president of sales at Skypatrol, which provides vehicle-tracking technology and other services.

In 2006, the Spanish banking giant Banco Santander, looking to expand in the United States, bought most of Drive Financial Services for $651 million.

Mr. Dundon retained a 10 percent stake and was appointed chief executive of the lender, which was renamed Santander Consumer USA.

General Motors, still recovering from a bankruptcy that led to its takeover by the United States government during the financial crisis, was also looking to expand its auto finance business. The car company had sold a majority stake in its in-house finance arm, the former GMAC, which became Ally Financial.

In July 2010, General Motors acquired AmeriCredit, a lender based in Fort Worth, for $3.5 billion.

The rise of both Santander Consumer and GM Financial are a testament to the profits that can be generated by making loans to people with checkered credit histories.

Some of that profit is fueled by securitization, the process of bundling often risky loans into bonds and selling them to investors like mutual funds and pensions.

In the auto market, securitization typically starts at the auto dealerships, which arrange loans for car customers. Lenders then take those loans, bundle them into bonds and then sell them to investors.

Along this chain, there is ample profit. The lenders can often make more loans at a lower cost than if they borrowed directly from the bond market. The Wall Street firms that package the deals earn hefty fees. The investors can earn relatively high returns on securities that the rating agencies have deemed low-risk.

The danger, though, is that lenders may be encouraged to lower their credit standards to churn out loans to keep up with investor demand. The deterioration that securitization can fuel has already begun as lenders reach lower and lower down the credit spectrum to find enough borrowers whose loans can then be put into investments. To entice more borrowers to buy cars, some lenders are lengthening the terms of their loans, for example.

Santander Consumer says it has not sacrificed credit quality in its bonds, and that no investors have lost money on any of its securitization deals. Still, in the $1.35 billion bond deal in September, the number of loans with longer terms rose and the loan-to-value ratio — or the amount of debt compared with the resale value of the cars — also increased, according to a report by Standard & Poor's Rating Service.

Auto lending has been good to Santander Consumers' Mr. Dundon. He owns a 13,556-square-foot house in Dallas with a putting green and five fireplaces. Through a company spokeswoman, Mr. Dundon declined to be interviewed for this article.

An avid golfer, Mr. Dundon, 43, has played with the likes of Tony Romo, the Dallas Cowboys quarterback. Pictures of such outings are posted on the company's website, and Mr. Dundon muses about the business lessons he has gleaned from the sport. After watching the Masters tournament at Augusta, Ga., he remarked how he was moved by the elite golfers competing for the top prize, a green jacket.

"We should all be inspired to seek out the equivalent of a green jacket in our work and life in general," Mr. Dundon wrote on his blog.

Video

The Remote Repo Man

As auto lenders reach out to those with poor credit, they are increasingly using starter interruption devices, technology that allows them to remotely disable a car, to spur timely payment.

Video by Sean Patrick Farrell on Publish Date September 25, 2014. Photo by By Sean Patrick Farrell on September 24, 2014. Photo John Gurzinski for The New York Times.

A Bet on Car Dependence

Mandy Gray of Boiling Springs, Pa., is unemployed and depends largely on her partner's $11-an-hour salary as a forklift operator. She says she has struggled to keep up with the $306 monthly payments on her Santander auto loan.

A lot is at stake not only for Ms. Gray, but for Santander Consumer.

The calculation by the lender is that Ms. Gray and thousands of other troubled borrowers will go to great lengths to keep their cars.

It is a reasonable wager.

For decades, even during rocky economic times, defaults on cars loans have remained relatively low.

In March, Ms. Gray, 35, received a $13,426.64 auto loan from Fifth Third Bank with a 17.72 percent interest rate. She bought a 2009 Hyundai. But five days later, Santander Consumer told her that her loan was "now owned by Santander Consumer," according to a letter from the lender reviewed by The Times. Ms. Gray, who has been taking online college courses, says she plans to use her financial aid money to catch up on missed car payments.

Americans are so dependent on their cars that investors are betting that they would rather lose their home to foreclosure than their car to repossession.

Or in the words of a Santander Consumer investor, "You can sleep in your car, but you can't drive your house to work."

Cracks in that theory are starting to emerge. Delinquencies on auto loans of 60 days or less are rising, and more Americans are losing their cars each month to repossession. Experian said 60-day loan delinquencies rose 8.6 percent in the third quarter of 2014, from a year ago.

Last year was star-crossed for Santander Consumer USA, its first as a publicly traded company. Shortly after Santander Consumer went public last January, one Wall Street analyst heralded the company as an "attractive way for investors to gain exposure to the auto lending market." Over the last year, shares of Santander Consumer have fallen roughly 23 percent.

Last year was also difficult for some Santander Consumer customers. Dane Carpe, of Creswell, Ore., borrowed $17,115.83 from the company at a 23.74 percent interest rate to buy a 2008 Dodge Charger, according to a copy of his loan document that was reviewed by The Times.

A former mortgage broker who declared bankruptcy, Mr. Carpe fell behind on his $449.94 monthly auto loan payments and has disputed with the lender over how his payments have been applied to his loan balance. On New Year's Eve, his car was repossessed, he said.

"I lived through the mortgage bubble, and this bubble is going to burst," he said.

More in This Series:

Rise in Loans Linked to Cars Is Hurting Poor

With a crackdown on payday lenders, subprime borrowers are increasingly using auto title loans, whose high interest rates can lead to repossession and financial ruin.

Miss a Payment? Good Luck Moving That Car

Subprime lenders are increasingly relying on technology that allows them to track and disable delinquent borrowers' vehicles with just a tap of a cellphone app.

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Source : http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2015/01/26/investment-riches-built-on-auto-loans-to-poor/

Philly Auto Show: 7 things to know before you go - NJ.com

The floor plan of the Philadelphia Auto Show is shown. 

The 2015 Philadelphia Auto Show will once again grace the floors of the Pennsylvania Convention Center. And if you're there for fun or are looking to figure out which car will be your next, the show is definitely the place to go. 

But before you head out — and get revved up — here are a few things you might want to know:

1.) The show opens on Saturday, Jan. 31 and runs through Sunday, Feb. 8. On Saturdays and Sundays the show opens at 9 a.m. and on weekdays, at noon. 

2.) At a lot of auto shows, you can't get in and sit in the cars. But at the Philly auto show, hop right in. Nearly every manufacturer's display welcomes people to sit inside the vehicles, pop the hood and kick the tires.

Guests can't sit in the concept or exotic vehicles, though.

3.) The auto show features more than 700 vehicles from more than 40 car manufacturers in 700,000 square feet of space, said Donald Franks, the chair of this year's auto show. So take your time and pace yourself. There are a lot of cars to see here. 

4.) Pre-production cars are worth a look. These vehicles, not yet on the market, include the 2016 Buick Cascada, 2016 Fiat 500 X, 2016 Ford Explorer, 2016 Honda HR-V, 2016 Lincoln MKX, 2016 Mazda CX-3 and the 2016 Nissan Titan. 

"We have a lot of great new cars lined up," said Franks. 

5.) Don't miss the concept car. This year's concept car, the Buick Avenir, is a sedan that has a sleek progressive design with new levels of passenger well-being and technology integration.

"There's a lot of technology in these new cars and we're seeing driver assist and self-driving cars," Franks said.

6.) Check out Camp Jeep. At Camp Jeep, where there will be a rock climbing wall for those adventurous show-goers. Called the ultimate indoor off-road driving test. The 25,000-square foot Camp Jeep exhibit gives auto show attendees a chance to experience the extreme off-road capabilities of Jeep vehicles without leaving the show floor. Guests can choose from Jeep Wrangler Unlimited, Wrangler Rubicon and Grand Cherokee.

7.) Ride and drive. This year, people interested in taking a test drive, can do that in a Kia or Toyota. Test drive — around the city — a new Camry, Corolla, Rav4 AWD and the Highlander. If you're interested in a Kia, test drive a K900, Optima, Soul, Sedona, Sorento or a Sportage.

Philadelphia Auto Show tickets are $13 for adults, $6 for seniors and children, children 6 and under are free. For more information, visit www.phillyautoshow.com.

Kristie Rearick may be reached at krearick@southjerseymedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @KArearick. Find the South Jersey Times on Facebook.a

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Source : http://www.nj.com/indulge/index.ssf/2015/01/philly_auto_show_things_to_know_before_you_go.html

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Auto show unveils new technology vehicles - WPVI-TV

This year's auto show will feature vehicles with lots of new technology.

The auto industry crashed the party at the consumer electronics show last month in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Kal Brauer, a senior analyst of Kelley Blue Book says, "The consumer electronics auto show has essentially become another auto show that as a car person, you have to go to."

Top auto makers showed off their advance technology, specifically driver safety systems.

"We have blind spot avoidance, you have lane departure avoidance, and you have cars that brake themselves. When you look at technology like this, it's just really cool," said Mike Gempp, the Director of the Auto Show.

Car makers are thinking beyond the driver altogether.

The fully autonomous car is still years away, but some of the technology is already here.

Action News checked out the 2015 200 Chrysler and found that it can park itself.

Once the parking is activated! , the Chrysler sensors will survey the scene.

The vehicle takes full control of the gas pedal and the wheel, while the driver regulates the brake.

For a preview of this car and others, watch the 6abc auto show special on Saturday at 7:00 p.m.

(Copyright ©2015 WPVI-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)

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Source : http://6abc.com/automotive/auto-show-unveils-new-technology-vehicles/494534/

Investment Riches Built on Subprime Auto Loans to Poor - New York Times

Photo
Dane Carpe, of Creswell, Ore., lost his 2008 Dodge Charger when he could not repay the $17,116 he borrowed at a 23.74 percent interest rate.Credit Carl Kiilsgaard for The New York Times

The loans were for used Dodges, Nissans and Chevrolets, many with tens of thousands of miles on the odometer, some more than a decade old.

They were also one of the hottest investments around.

So many asset managers clamored for a piece of a September bond deal made up of these loans that the size of the offering was increased 35 percent, to $1.35 billion. Even then, Santander Consumer USA received more than $1 billion in investor demand that it could not accommodate.

Driven Into Debt

Articles in this series are examining the boom in subprime auto loans.

Across the country, there is a booming business in lending to the working poor — those Americans with impaired credit who need cars to get to work. But this market is as much about Wall Street's perpetual demand for high returns as it is about used cars. An influx of investor money is making more loans possible, but all that money may also be enabling excessive risk-taking that could have repercussions throughout the financial system, analysts and regulators caution.

In a kind of alchemy that Wall Street has previously performed with mortgages, thousands of subprime auto loans are bundled together and sold as securities to investors, including mutual funds, insurance companies and hedge funds. By slicing and dicing the securities, any losses if borrowers default can be contained, in theory.

Led by companies like Santander Consumer; GM Financial, General Motors' lending unit; and Exeter Finance, an arm of the Blackstone Group, such securitizations have grown 302 percent, to $20.2 billion since 2010, according to Thomson Reuters IFR Markets. And even as rising delinquencies and other signs of stress in the market emerged last year, subprime securitizations increased 28 percent from 2013.

Taking On More Risk

Deals made up of auto loans to borrowers whom creditors deem riskier have increased since 2010.

Total subprime auto loan securitizations

The returns are substantial in a time of low interest rates. In the case of the Santander Consumer bond offering in September, which is backed by loans on more than 84,000 vehicles, some of the highest-rated notes yield more than twice as much as certain Treasury securities, but are just as safe, according to ratings firms.

Now questions are being raised about whether this hot Wall Street market is contributing to a broad loosening of credit standards across the subprime auto industry. A review by The New York Times of dozens of court records, and interviews with two dozen borrowers, credit analysts, legal aid lawyers and investors, show that some of the companies, which package and sell the loans, are increasingly enabling people at the extreme financial margins to obtain loans to buy cars.

The intense demand for subprime auto securities may also be fueling a more troubling development: a rise in loans that contain falsified income or employment information. The Justice Department in Washington is coordinating an investigation among prosecutors' offices across the country into whether such faulty information ended up in securitization deals, according to people briefed on the inquiries.

The examinations, which began this summer after a front-page article in The Times reported on potential abuses in subprime auto lending, are modeled on the federal investigation into the sale of mortgage-backed securities — an effort that has already yielded billions of dollars of settlements.

Prosecutors have sent a spate of subpoenas. This summer, the office of Preet Bharara, the United States attorney for the Southern District of New York, sent subpoenas to Santander Consumer and GM Financial. The United States attorney in Detroit subpoenaed Ally Financial in December. And Consumer Portfolio Services, a subprime lender, said last week in a regulatory filing that the company had received a subpoena related to its "subprime automotive finance and related securitization activities."

"There is so much money looking for a positive return that people get lazy," said Christopher L. Gillock, a managing director at Colonnade Advisors, a financial advisory firm in Chicago that has worked with subprime auto lenders. "Investors see it is rated triple-A, turn off their brains and buy into the paper."

Among the borrowers stoking the lending boom are people like Dana Payne.

Ms. Payne, a former administrative assistant in the New York Police City Department, has not made a single payment on a $30,770 Santander loan that was taken out to buy a 2011 BMW 328xi. Ms. Payne, who has no driver's license, said she took out the loan so her daughter, who lives in New Jersey, could have a car. The loan has an interest rate of 11.89 percent, according to her loan document, a copy of which was reviewed by The Times.

Ms. Payne went with her daughter to a dealership that arranges loans for Santander and other auto lenders to buy the car. She said an employee at the dealership in Great Neck, N.Y., assured her that, even though she was on food stamps, she could afford the loan. At the time, Ms. Payne said she thought she was co-signing the loan with her daughter.

"I looked him in the eye and said, 'I don't have any income,' " said Ms. Payne.

The dealership did not comment.

The lenders point out they are providing loans to people who might not otherwise be able to buy cars. They say they have acted to insulate investors from losses. In many bonds, lenders take the first losses when loans sour, a safeguard few mortgage deals contain.

"Subprime lending by its nature involves evaluating the creditworthiness and ability to repay of borrowers who may have had financial difficulties in the past, such as a bankruptcy, a foreclosure or difficulty in managing revolving credit," Stephen Jones, vice president investor relations at GM Financial, said in a statement.

The lenders say they vet their dealer partners, watching for patterns of complaints against dealerships and other warning signs like higher than average defaults.

Laurie Kight, vice president of communications at Santander Consumer, said in a statement that the lender has a "rigorous and active dealer control operation, which is part of the company's overall compliance framework." She added, "This operation audits, investigates and — if necessary — ceases operations with any dealers who conduct fraudulent or high-risk activities."

Investors are betting that the companies are experienced enough to weed out problem loans.

Still, some credit analysts have questioned whether the market has grown too much, too fast.

Some rating firms that faced criticism after the mortgage crisis for blessing shaky investments with top ratings are taking a critical approach to subprime auto deals.

Fitch Ratings will issue its highest ratings only to bonds issued by lenders with long track records and that don't rely entirely on securitizations to fund their business, like Santander Consumer and GM Financial. And Standard & Poor's has recently sounded alarms about the declining quality of the loans backing the investments.

Even those warnings, critics say, do not fully capture the fundamental risks.

Mr. Gillock, the financial adviser in Chicago, said that no bond made up of subprime auto loans should ever receive a triple-A rating — a designation that only three blue-chip companies, Exxon, Microsoft and Johnson & Johnson, receive on their debt offerings.

"It is hard for me to place securities backed by subprime auto finance receivables in the same category," he said.

Video

No Credit? No Problem

Banks and private equity firms searching for high-yield investments have fueled a boom in subprime auto loans to buyers who can't afford them, including those who recently filed for bankruptcy.

Video by Axel Gerdau and John Woo on Publish Date July 19, 2014.

If You Can't Beat Him . . .

The financial crisis provided an opportunity for subprime auto loan securitizations.

With the once-enormous market in mortgage-backed securities largely frozen, investors looked for new opportunities. One bright spot was auto lending. Even in the depths of the recession, people needed cars and were willing to pay steep rates for a loan.

Seizing upon this demand, private equity investors began scouring the country looking to acquire lenders or pools of auto loans that banks no longer wanted.

Time and again, however, the private equity firms found that a Texas firm headed by Tom Dundon, an auto finance veteran, had beaten them to the punch.

"We looked on with envy," said an executive at one of the private equity firms.

Mr. Dundon and a group of partners started the business that would become Santander Consumer in the 1990s, expanding the company — then called Drive Financial Services — from a regional lender in Texas into a national player operating in 35 states.

Drive Financial was known for lending to used-car customers that other lenders rejected. In industry parlance, the company went "deep" — meaning that it made loans to people far down on the credit spectrum.

"They were very popular with dealers because they were able to finance people that others could not," said Mark Peters, a longtime auto lending executive in Dallas, who is now senior vice president of sales at Skypatrol, which provides vehicle-tracking technology and other services.

In 2006, the Spanish banking giant Banco Santander, looking to expand in the United States, bought most of Drive Financial Services for $651 million.

Mr. Dundon retained a 10 percent stake and was appointed chief executive of the lender, which was renamed Santander Consumer USA.

General Motors, still recovering from a bankruptcy that led to its takeover by the United States government during the financial crisis, was also looking to expand its auto finance business. The car company had sold a majority stake in its in-house finance arm, the former GMAC, which became Ally Financial.

In July 2010, General Motors acquired AmeriCredit, a lender based in Fort Worth, for $3.5 billion.

The rise of both Santander Consumer and GM Financial are a testament to the profits that can be generated by making loans to people with checkered credit histories.

Some of that profit is fueled by securitization, the process of bundling often risky loans into bonds and selling them to investors like mutual funds and pensions.

In the auto market, securitization typically starts at the auto dealerships, which arrange loans for car customers. Lenders then take those loans, bundle them into bonds and then sell them to investors.

Along this chain, there is ample profit. The lenders can often make more loans at a lower cost than if they borrowed directly from the bond market. The Wall Street firms that package the deals earn hefty fees. The investors can earn relatively high returns on securities that the rating agencies have deemed low-risk.

The danger, though, is that lenders may be encouraged to lower their credit standards to churn out loans to keep up with investor demand. The deterioration that securitization can fuel has already begun as lenders reach lower and lower down the credit spectrum to find enough borrowers whose loans can then be put into investments. To entice more borrowers to buy cars, some lenders are lengthening the terms of their loans, for example.

Santander Consumer says it has not sacrificed credit quality in its bonds, and that no investors have lost money on any of its securitization deals. Still, in the $1.35 billion bond deal in September, the number of loans with longer terms rose and the loan-to-value ratio — or the amount of debt compared with the resale value of the cars — also increased, according to a report by Standard & Poor's Rating Service.

Auto lending has been good to Santander Consumers' Mr. Dundon. He owns a 13,556-square-foot house in Dallas with a putting green and five fireplaces. Through a company spokeswoman, Mr. Dundon declined to be interviewed for this article.

An avid golfer, Mr. Dundon, 43, has played with the likes of Tony Romo, the Dallas Cowboys quarterback. Pictures of such outings are posted on the company's website, and Mr. Dundon muses about the business lessons he has gleaned from the sport. After watching the Masters tournament at Augusta, Ga., he remarked how he was moved by the elite golfers competing for the top prize, a green jacket.

"We should all be inspired to seek out the equivalent of a green jacket in our work and life in general," Mr. Dundon wrote on his blog.

Video

The Remote Repo Man

As auto lenders reach out to those with poor credit, they are increasingly using starter interruption devices, technology that allows them to remotely disable a car, to spur timely payment.

Video by Sean Patrick Farrell on Publish Date September 25, 2014. Photo by By Sean Patrick Farrell on September 24, 2014. Photo John Gurzinski for The New York Times.

A Bet on Car Dependence

Mandy Gray of Boiling Springs, Pa., is unemployed and depends largely on her partner's $11-an-hour salary as a forklift operator. She says she has struggled to keep up with the $306 monthly payments on her Santander auto loan.

A lot is at stake not only for Ms. Gray, but for Santander Consumer.

The calculation by the lender is that Ms. Gray and thousands of other troubled borrowers will go to great lengths to keep their cars.

It is a reasonable wager.

For decades, even during rocky economic times, defaults on cars loans have remained relatively low.

In March, Ms. Gray, 35, received a $13,426.64 auto loan from Fifth Third Bank with a 17.72 percent interest rate. She bought a 2009 Hyundai. But five days later, Santander Consumer told her that her loan was "now owned by Santander Consumer," according to a letter from the lender reviewed by The Times. Ms. Gray, who has been taking online college courses, says she plans to use her financial aid money to catch up on missed car payments.

Americans are so dependent on their cars that investors are betting that they would rather lose their home to foreclosure than their car to repossession.

Or in the words of a Santander Consumer investor, "You can sleep in your car, but you can't drive your house to work."

Cracks in that theory are starting to emerge. Delinquencies on auto loans of 60 days or less are rising, and more Americans are losing their cars each month to repossession. Experian said 60-day loan delinquencies rose 8.6 percent in the third quarter of 2014, from a year ago.

Last year was star-crossed for Santander Consumer USA, its first as a publicly traded company. Shortly after Santander Consumer went public last January, one Wall Street analyst heralded the company as an "attractive way for investors to gain exposure to the auto lending market." Over the last year, shares of Santander Consumer have fallen roughly 23 percent.

Last year was also difficult for some Santander Consumer customers. Dane Carpe, of Creswell, Ore., borrowed $17,115.83 from the company at a 23.74 percent interest rate to buy a 2008 Dodge Charger, according to a copy of his loan document that was reviewed by The Times.

A former mortgage broker who declared bankruptcy, Mr. Carpe fell behind on his $449.94 monthly auto loan payments and has disputed with the lender over how his payments have been applied to his loan balance. On New Year's Eve, his car was repossessed, he said.

"I lived through the mortgage bubble, and this bubble is going to burst," he said.

More in This Series:

Rise in Loans Linked to Cars Is Hurting Poor

With a crackdown on payday lenders, subprime borrowers are increasingly using auto title loans, whose high interest rates can lead to repossession and financial ruin.

Miss a Payment? Good Luck Moving That Car

Subprime lenders are increasingly relying on technology that allows them to track and disable delinquent borrowers' vehicles with just a tap of a cellphone app.

Recommended article: Chomsky: We Are All – Fill in the Blank.
This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service - if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.

Source : http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2015/01/26/investment-riches-built-on-auto-loans-to-poor/

Detroit auto show: Ford GT, Acura NSX top reader favorites - MLive.com

DETROIT, MI - It was little more than two weeks ago that Ford Motor Co. confirmed some of the rumors that had been floating around, and officially unveiled an all-new Ford GT supercar. 

Since then, onlookers both at the 2015 North American International Auto Show as well as online have not been able to see enough of it. It's a magnificent-looking machine, after all.

So it's little surprise that it took the top spot in a poll we posted Monday, asking readers to select which vehicle, regardless of cost or availability, they would choose to have from the Detroit auto show, if they could take home any of the top reveals.

With a total of 485 votes cast as of Tuesday morning, the Ford GT easily took the top spot with 166 votes. It was followed by the highly anticipated Acura NSX supercar, which garnered 73 votes. 

Billed as American-made, Honda has offered hints of its luxury brand's updated sports car in the past, and the Japanese automaker finally released the twin-turbo charged production version of the car in Detroit.

The development of the next-gen NSX has been led by an American R&D team in Raymond, Ohio, and the car is being built at Honda's Performance Manufacturing Center in Marysville, Ohio. Design was led by the Acura's studio in in Torrance, Calif.

Surprisingly, the Ford Mustang Shelby GT350 R has so far held on to third place with 49 votes. The street-legal-but-track-ready Mustang is arguably a bit of a dark horse, seeing as it was unveiled at the show in the shadow of the GT, although Ford did pull the cover off of some in-house photos and specs ahead of time. 

The same was true for the Cadillac CTS-V, which has held onto fourth place in our poll with 42 votes. Launching late next summer, the 640-horsepower CTS-V is the most powerful product in the General Motors luxury brand's 112-year history.

Rounding out the top five was the Ford F-150 Raptor, also unveiled just before the GT at the Joe Louis Arena on Monday, Jan. 12. 

A total of 55 vehicles were revealed to journalists during the press preview of the show. Now in its 27th year as an international event, the Detroit auto show opened to the public on Jan. 17 and ran through Sunday. 

David Muller is the automotive and business reporter for MLive Media Group in Detroit. Email him at dmuller@mlive.com or follow him on Twitter

Recommended article: Chomsky: We Are All – Fill in the Blank.
This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service - if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.

Source : http://www.mlive.com/auto/index.ssf/2015/01/detroit_auto_show_ford_gt_acur.html

Investment Riches Built on Subprime Auto Loans to Poor - New York Times

Photo
Dane Carpe, of Creswell, Ore., lost his 2008 Dodge Charger when he could not repay the $17,116 he borrowed at a 23.74 percent interest rate.Credit Carl Kiilsgaard for The New York Times

The loans were for used Dodges, Nissans and Chevrolets, many with tens of thousands of miles on the odometer, some more than a decade old.

They were also one of the hottest investments around.

So many asset managers clamored for a piece of a September bond deal made up of these loans that the size of the offering was increased 35 percent, to $1.35 billion. Even then, Santander Consumer USA received more than $1 billion in investor demand that it could not accommodate.

Driven Into Debt

Articles in this series are examining the boom in subprime auto loans.

Across the country, there is a booming business in lending to the working poor — those Americans with impaired credit who need cars to get to work. But this market is as much about Wall Street's perpetual demand for high returns as it is about used cars. An influx of investor money is making more loans possible, but all that money may also be enabling excessive risk-taking that could have repercussions throughout the financial system, analysts and regulators caution.

In a kind of alchemy that Wall Street has previously performed with mortgages, thousands of subprime auto loans are bundled together and sold as securities to investors, including mutual funds, insurance companies and hedge funds. By slicing and dicing the securities, any losses if borrowers default can be contained, in theory.

Led by companies like Santander Consumer; GM Financial, General Motors' lending unit; and Exeter Finance, an arm of the Blackstone Group, such securitizations have grown 302 percent, to $20.2 billion since 2010, according to Thomson Reuters IFR Markets. And even as rising delinquencies and other signs of stress in the market emerged last year, subprime securitizations increased 28 percent from 2013.

Taking On More Risk

Deals made up of auto loans to borrowers whom creditors deem riskier have increased since 2010.

Total subprime auto loan securitizations

The returns are substantial in a time of low interest rates. In the case of the Santander Consumer bond offering in September, which is backed by loans on more than 84,000 vehicles, some of the highest-rated notes yield more than twice as much as certain Treasury securities, but are just as safe, according to ratings firms.

Now questions are being raised about whether this hot Wall Street market is contributing to a broad loosening of credit standards across the subprime auto industry. A review by The New York Times of dozens of court records, and interviews with two dozen borrowers, credit analysts, legal aid lawyers and investors, show that some of the companies, which package and sell the loans, are increasingly enabling people at the extreme financial margins to obtain loans to buy cars.

The intense demand for subprime auto securities may also be fueling a more troubling development: a rise in loans that contain falsified income or employment information. The Justice Department in Washington is coordinating an investigation among prosecutors' offices across the country into whether such faulty information ended up in securitization deals, according to people briefed on the inquiries.

The examinations, which began this summer after a front-page article in The Times reported on potential abuses in subprime auto lending, are modeled on the federal investigation into the sale of mortgage-backed securities — an effort that has already yielded billions of dollars of settlements.

Prosecutors have sent a spate of subpoenas. This summer, the office of Preet Bharara, the United States attorney for the Southern District of New York, sent subpoenas to Santander Consumer and GM Financial. The United States attorney in Detroit subpoenaed Ally Financial in December. And Consumer Portfolio Services, a subprime lender, said last week in a regulatory filing that the company had received a subpoena related to its "subprime automotive finance and related securitization activities."

"There is so much money looking for a positive return that people get lazy," said Christopher L. Gillock, a managing director at Colonnade Advisors, a financial advisory firm in Chicago that has worked with subprime auto lenders. "Investors see it is rated triple-A, turn off their brains and buy into the paper."

Among the borrowers stoking the lending boom are people like Dana Payne.

Ms. Payne, a former administrative assistant in the New York Police City Department, has not made a single payment on a $30,770 Santander loan that was taken out to buy a 2011 BMW 328xi. Ms. Payne, who has no driver's license, said she took out the loan so her daughter, who lives in New Jersey, could have a car. The loan has an interest rate of 11.89 percent, according to her loan document, a copy of which was reviewed by The Times.

Ms. Payne went with her daughter to a dealership that arranges loans for Santander and other auto lenders to buy the car. She said an employee at the dealership in Great Neck, N.Y., assured her that, even though she was on food stamps, she could afford the loan. At the time, Ms. Payne said she thought she was co-signing the loan with her daughter.

"I looked him in the eye and said, 'I don't have any income,' " said Ms. Payne.

The dealership did not comment.

The lenders point out they are providing loans to people who might not otherwise be able to buy cars. They say they have acted to insulate investors from losses. In many bonds, lenders take the first losses when loans sour, a safeguard few mortgage deals contain.

"Subprime lending by its nature involves evaluating the creditworthiness and ability to repay of borrowers who may have had financial difficulties in the past, such as a bankruptcy, a foreclosure or difficulty in managing revolving credit," Stephen Jones, vice president investor relations at GM Financial, said in a statement.

The lenders say they vet their dealer partners, watching for patterns of complaints against dealerships and other warning signs like higher than average defaults.

Laurie Kight, vice president of communications at Santander Consumer, said in a statement that the lender has a "rigorous and active dealer control operation, which is part of the company's overall compliance framework." She added, "This operation audits, investigates and — if necessary — ceases operations with any dealers who conduct fraudulent or high-risk activities."

Investors are betting that the companies are experienced enough to weed out problem loans.

Still, some credit analysts have questioned whether the market has grown too much, too fast.

Some rating firms that faced criticism after the mortgage crisis for blessing shaky investments with top ratings are taking a critical approach to subprime auto deals.

Fitch Ratings will issue its highest ratings only to bonds issued by lenders with long track records and that don't rely entirely on securitizations to fund their business, like Santander Consumer and GM Financial. And Standard & Poor's has recently sounded alarms about the declining quality of the loans backing the investments.

Even those warnings, critics say, do not fully capture the fundamental risks.

Mr. Gillock, the financial adviser in Chicago, said that no bond made up of subprime auto loans should ever receive a triple-A rating — a designation that only three blue-chip companies, Exxon, Microsoft and Johnson & Johnson, receive on their debt offerings.

"It is hard for me to place securities backed by subprime auto finance receivables in the same category," he said.

Video

No Credit? No Problem

Banks and private equity firms searching for high-yield investments have fueled a boom in subprime auto loans to buyers who can't afford them, including those who recently filed for bankruptcy.

Video by Axel Gerdau and John Woo on Publish Date July 19, 2014.

If You Can't Beat Him . . .

The financial crisis provided an opportunity for subprime auto loan securitizations.

With the once-enormous market in mortgage-backed securities largely frozen, investors looked for new opportunities. One bright spot was auto lending. Even in the depths of the recession, people needed cars and were willing to pay steep rates for a loan.

Seizing upon this demand, private equity investors began scouring the country looking to acquire lenders or pools of auto loans that banks no longer wanted.

Time and again, however, the private equity firms found that a Texas firm headed by Tom Dundon, an auto finance veteran, had beaten them to the punch.

"We looked on with envy," said an executive at one of the private equity firms.

Mr. Dundon and a group of partners started the business that would become Santander Consumer in the 1990s, expanding the company — then called Drive Financial Services — from a regional lender in Texas into a national player operating in 35 states.

Drive Financial was known for lending to used-car customers that other lenders rejected. In industry parlance, the company went "deep" — meaning that it made loans to people far down on the credit spectrum.

"They were very popular with dealers because they were able to finance people that others could not," said Mark Peters, a longtime auto lending executive in Dallas, who is now senior vice president of sales at Skypatrol, which provides vehicle-tracking technology and other services.

In 2006, the Spanish banking giant Banco Santander, looking to expand in the United States, bought most of Drive Financial Services for $651 million.

Mr. Dundon retained a 10 percent stake and was appointed chief executive of the lender, which was renamed Santander Consumer USA.

General Motors, still recovering from a bankruptcy that led to its takeover by the United States government during the financial crisis, was also looking to expand its auto finance business. The car company had sold a majority stake in its in-house finance arm, the former GMAC, which became Ally Financial.

In July 2010, General Motors acquired AmeriCredit, a lender based in Fort Worth, for $3.5 billion.

The rise of both Santander Consumer and GM Financial are a testament to the profits that can be generated by making loans to people with checkered credit histories.

Some of that profit is fueled by securitization, the process of bundling often risky loans into bonds and selling them to investors like mutual funds and pensions.

In the auto market, securitization typically starts at the auto dealerships, which arrange loans for car customers. Lenders then take those loans, bundle them into bonds and then sell them to investors.

Along this chain, there is ample profit. The lenders can often make more loans at a lower cost than if they borrowed directly from the bond market. The Wall Street firms that package the deals earn hefty fees. The investors can earn relatively high returns on securities that the rating agencies have deemed low-risk.

The danger, though, is that lenders may be encouraged to lower their credit standards to churn out loans to keep up with investor demand. The deterioration that securitization can fuel has already begun as lenders reach lower and lower down the credit spectrum to find enough borrowers whose loans can then be put into investments. To entice more borrowers to buy cars, some lenders are lengthening the terms of their loans, for example.

Santander Consumer says it has not sacrificed credit quality in its bonds, and that no investors have lost money on any of its securitization deals. Still, in the $1.35 billion bond deal in September, the number of loans with longer terms rose and the loan-to-value ratio — or the amount of debt compared with the resale value of the cars — also increased, according to a report by Standard & Poor's Rating Service.

Auto lending has been good to Santander Consumers' Mr. Dundon. He owns a 13,556-square-foot house in Dallas with a putting green and five fireplaces. Through a company spokeswoman, Mr. Dundon declined to be interviewed for this article.

An avid golfer, Mr. Dundon, 43, has played with the likes of Tony Romo, the Dallas Cowboys quarterback. Pictures of such outings are posted on the company's website, and Mr. Dundon muses about the business lessons he has gleaned from the sport. After watching the Masters tournament at Augusta, Ga., he remarked how he was moved by the elite golfers competing for the top prize, a green jacket.

"We should all be inspired to seek out the equivalent of a green jacket in our work and life in general," Mr. Dundon wrote on his blog.

Video

The Remote Repo Man

As auto lenders reach out to those with poor credit, they are increasingly using starter interruption devices, technology that allows them to remotely disable a car, to spur timely payment.

Video by Sean Patrick Farrell on Publish Date September 25, 2014. Photo by By Sean Patrick Farrell on September 24, 2014. Photo John Gurzinski for The New York Times.

A Bet on Car Dependence

Mandy Gray of Boiling Springs, Pa., is unemployed and depends largely on her partner's $11-an-hour salary as a forklift operator. She says she has struggled to keep up with the $306 monthly payments on her Santander auto loan.

A lot is at stake not only for Ms. Gray, but for Santander Consumer.

The calculation by the lender is that Ms. Gray and thousands of other troubled borrowers will go to great lengths to keep their cars.

It is a reasonable wager.

For decades, even during rocky economic times, defaults on cars loans have remained relatively low.

In March, Ms. Gray, 35, received a $13,426.64 auto loan from Fifth Third Bank with a 17.72 percent interest rate. She bought a 2009 Hyundai. But five days later, Santander Consumer told her that her loan was "now owned by Santander Consumer," according to a letter from the lender reviewed by The Times. Ms. Gray, who has been taking online college courses, says she plans to use her financial aid money to catch up on missed car payments.

Americans are so dependent on their cars that investors are betting that they would rather lose their home to foreclosure than their car to repossession.

Or in the words of a Santander Consumer investor, "You can sleep in your car, but you can't drive your house to work."

Cracks in that theory are starting to emerge. Delinquencies on auto loans of 60 days or less are rising, and more Americans are losing their cars each month to repossession. Experian said 60-day loan delinquencies rose 8.6 percent in the third quarter of 2014, from a year ago.

Last year was star-crossed for Santander Consumer USA, its first as a publicly traded company. Shortly after Santander Consumer went public last January, one Wall Street analyst heralded the company as an "attractive way for investors to gain exposure to the auto lending market." Over the last year, shares of Santander Consumer have fallen roughly 23 percent.

Last year was also difficult for some Santander Consumer customers. Dane Carpe, of Creswell, Ore., borrowed $17,115.83 from the company at a 23.74 percent interest rate to buy a 2008 Dodge Charger, according to a copy of his loan document that was reviewed by The Times.

A former mortgage broker who declared bankruptcy, Mr. Carpe fell behind on his $449.94 monthly auto loan payments and has disputed with the lender over how his payments have been applied to his loan balance. On New Year's Eve, his car was repossessed, he said.

"I lived through the mortgage bubble, and this bubble is going to burst," he said.

More in This Series:

Rise in Loans Linked to Cars Is Hurting Poor

With a crackdown on payday lenders, subprime borrowers are increasingly using auto title loans, whose high interest rates can lead to repossession and financial ruin.

Miss a Payment? Good Luck Moving That Car

Subprime lenders are increasingly relying on technology that allows them to track and disable delinquent borrowers' vehicles with just a tap of a cellphone app.

Recommended article: Chomsky: We Are All – Fill in the Blank.
This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service - if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.

Source : http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2015/01/26/investment-riches-built-on-auto-loans-to-poor/

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Detroit auto show: Ford GT, Acura NSX top reader favorites - MLive.com

DETROIT, MI - It was little more than two weeks ago that Ford Motor Co. confirmed some of the rumors that had been floating around, and officially unveiled an all-new Ford GT supercar. 

Since then, onlookers both at the 2015 North American International Auto Show as well as online have not been able to see enough of it. It's a magnificent-looking machine, after all.

So it's little surprise that it took the top spot in a poll we posted Monday, asking readers to select which vehicle, regardless of cost or availability, they would choose to have from the Detroit auto show, if they could take home any of the top reveals.

With a total of 485 votes cast as of Tuesday morning, the Ford GT easily took the top spot with 166 votes. It was followed by the highly anticipated Acura NSX supercar, which garnered 73 votes. 

Billed as American-made, Honda has offered hints of its luxury brand's updated sports car in the past, and the Japanese automaker finally released the twin-turbo charged production version of the car in Detroit.

The development of the next-gen NSX has been led by an American R&D team in Raymond, Ohio, and the car is being built at Honda's Performance Manufacturing Center in Marysville, Ohio. Design was led by the Acura's studio in in Torrance, Calif.

Surprisingly, the Ford Mustang Shelby GT350 R has so far held on to third place with 49 votes. The street-legal-but-track-ready Mustang is arguably a bit of a dark horse, seeing as it was unveiled at the show in the shadow of the GT, although Ford did pull the cover off of some in-house photos and specs ahead of time. 

The same was true for the Cadillac CTS-V, which has held onto fourth place in our poll with 42 votes. Launching late next summer, the 640-horsepower CTS-V is the most powerful product in the General Motors luxury brand's 112-year history.

Rounding out the top five was the Ford F-150 Raptor, also unveiled just before the GT at the Joe Louis Arena on Monday, Jan. 12. 

A total of 55 vehicles were revealed to journalists during the press preview of the show. Now in its 27th year as an international event, the Detroit auto show opened to the public on Jan. 17 and ran through Sunday. 

David Muller is the automotive and business reporter for MLive Media Group in Detroit. Email him at dmuller@mlive.com or follow him on Twitter

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Investment Riches Built on Subprime Auto Loans to Poor - New York Times

Photo
Dane Carpe, of Creswell, Ore., lost his 2008 Dodge Charger when he could not repay the $17,116 he borrowed at a 23.74 percent interest rate.Credit Carl Kiilsgaard for The New York Times

The loans were for used Dodges, Nissans and Chevrolets, many with tens of thousands of miles on the odometer, some more than a decade old.

They were also one of the hottest investments around.

So many asset managers clamored for a piece of a September bond deal made up of these loans that the size of the offering was increased 35 percent, to $1.35 billion. Even then, Santander Consumer USA received more than $1 billion in investor demand that it could not accommodate.

Driven Into Debt

Articles in this series are examining the boom in subprime auto loans.

Across the country, there is a booming business in lending to the working poor — those Americans with impaired credit who need cars to get to work. But this market is as much about Wall Street's perpetual demand for high returns as it is about used cars. An influx of investor money is making more loans possible, but all that money may also be enabling excessive risk-taking that could have repercussions throughout the financial system, analysts and regulators caution.

In a kind of alchemy that Wall Street has previously performed with mortgages, thousands of subprime auto loans are bundled together and sold as securities to investors, including mutual funds, insurance companies and hedge funds. By slicing and dicing the securities, any losses if borrowers default can be contained, in theory.

Led by companies like Santander Consumer; GM Financial, General Motors' lending unit; and Exeter Finance, an arm of the Blackstone Group, such securitizations have grown 302 percent, to $20.2 billion since 2010, according to Thomson Reuters IFR Markets. And even as rising delinquencies and other signs of stress in the market emerged last year, subprime securitizations increased 28 percent from 2013.

Taking On More Risk

Deals made up of auto loans to borrowers whom creditors deem riskier have increased since 2010.

Total subprime auto loan securitizations

The returns are substantial in a time of low interest rates. In the case of the Santander Consumer bond offering in September, which is backed by loans on more than 84,000 vehicles, some of the highest-rated notes yield more than twice as much as certain Treasury securities, but are just as safe, according to ratings firms.

Now questions are being raised about whether this hot Wall Street market is contributing to a broad loosening of credit standards across the subprime auto industry. A review by The New York Times of dozens of court records, and interviews with two dozen borrowers, credit analysts, legal aid lawyers and investors, show that some of the companies, which package and sell the loans, are increasingly enabling people at the extreme financial margins to obtain loans to buy cars.

The intense demand for subprime auto securities may also be fueling a more troubling development: a rise in loans that contain falsified income or employment information. The Justice Department in Washington is coordinating an investigation among prosecutors' offices across the country into whether such faulty information ended up in securitization deals, according to people briefed on the inquiries.

The examinations, which began this summer after a front-page article in The Times reported on potential abuses in subprime auto lending, are modeled on the federal investigation into the sale of mortgage-backed securities — an effort that has already yielded billions of dollars of settlements.

Prosecutors have sent a spate of subpoenas. This summer, the office of Preet Bharara, the United States attorney for the Southern District of New York, sent subpoenas to Santander Consumer and GM Financial. The United States attorney in Detroit subpoenaed Ally Financial in December. And Consumer Portfolio Services, a subprime lender, said last week in a regulatory filing that the company had received a subpoena related to its "subprime automotive finance and related securitization activities."

"There is so much money looking for a positive return that people get lazy," said Christopher L. Gillock, a managing director at Colonnade Advisors, a financial advisory firm in Chicago that has worked with subprime auto lenders. "Investors see it is rated triple-A, turn off their brains and buy into the paper."

Among the borrowers stoking the lending boom are people like Dana Payne.

Ms. Payne, a former administrative assistant in the New York Police City Department, has not made a single payment on a $30,770 Santander loan that was taken out to buy a 2011 BMW 328xi. Ms. Payne, who has no driver's license, said she took out the loan so her daughter, who lives in New Jersey, could have a car. The loan has an interest rate of 11.89 percent, according to her loan document, a copy of which was reviewed by The Times.

Ms. Payne went with her daughter to a dealership that arranges loans for Santander and other auto lenders to buy the car. She said an employee at the dealership in Great Neck, N.Y., assured her that, even though she was on food stamps, she could afford the loan. At the time, Ms. Payne said she thought she was co-signing the loan with her daughter.

"I looked him in the eye and said, 'I don't have any income,' " said Ms. Payne.

The dealership did not comment.

The lenders point out they are providing loans to people who might not otherwise be able to buy cars. They say they have acted to insulate investors from losses. In many bonds, lenders take the first losses when loans sour, a safeguard few mortgage deals contain.

"Subprime lending by its nature involves evaluating the creditworthiness and ability to repay of borrowers who may have had financial difficulties in the past, such as a bankruptcy, a foreclosure or difficulty in managing revolving credit," Stephen Jones, vice president investor relations at GM Financial, said in a statement.

The lenders say they vet their dealer partners, watching for patterns of complaints against dealerships and other warning signs like higher than average defaults.

Laurie Kight, vice president of communications at Santander Consumer, said in a statement that the lender has a "rigorous and active dealer control operation, which is part of the company's overall compliance framework." She added, "This operation audits, investigates and — if necessary — ceases operations with any dealers who conduct fraudulent or high-risk activities."

Investors are betting that the companies are experienced enough to weed out problem loans.

Still, some credit analysts have questioned whether the market has grown too much, too fast.

Some rating firms that faced criticism after the mortgage crisis for blessing shaky investments with top ratings are taking a critical approach to subprime auto deals.

Fitch Ratings will issue its highest ratings only to bonds issued by lenders with long track records and that don't rely entirely on securitizations to fund their business, like Santander Consumer and GM Financial. And Standard & Poor's has recently sounded alarms about the declining quality of the loans backing the investments.

Even those warnings, critics say, do not fully capture the fundamental risks.

Mr. Gillock, the financial adviser in Chicago, said that no bond made up of subprime auto loans should ever receive a triple-A rating — a designation that only three blue-chip companies, Exxon, Microsoft and Johnson & Johnson, receive on their debt offerings.

"It is hard for me to place securities backed by subprime auto finance receivables in the same category," he said.

Video

No Credit? No Problem

Banks and private equity firms searching for high-yield investments have fueled a boom in subprime auto loans to buyers who can't afford them, including those who recently filed for bankruptcy.

Video by Axel Gerdau and John Woo on Publish Date July 19, 2014.

If You Can't Beat Him . . .

The financial crisis provided an opportunity for subprime auto loan securitizations.

With the once-enormous market in mortgage-backed securities largely frozen, investors looked for new opportunities. One bright spot was auto lending. Even in the depths of the recession, people needed cars and were willing to pay steep rates for a loan.

Seizing upon this demand, private equity investors began scouring the country looking to acquire lenders or pools of auto loans that banks no longer wanted.

Time and again, however, the private equity firms found that a Texas firm headed by Tom Dundon, an auto finance veteran, had beaten them to the punch.

"We looked on with envy," said an executive at one of the private equity firms.

Mr. Dundon and a group of partners started the business that would become Santander Consumer in the 1990s, expanding the company — then called Drive Financial Services — from a regional lender in Texas into a national player operating in 35 states.

Drive Financial was known for lending to used-car customers that other lenders rejected. In industry parlance, the company went "deep" — meaning that it made loans to people far down on the credit spectrum.

"They were very popular with dealers because they were able to finance people that others could not," said Mark Peters, a longtime auto lending executive in Dallas, who is now senior vice president of sales at Skypatrol, which provides vehicle-tracking technology and other services.

In 2006, the Spanish banking giant Banco Santander, looking to expand in the United States, bought most of Drive Financial Services for $651 million.

Mr. Dundon retained a 10 percent stake and was appointed chief executive of the lender, which was renamed Santander Consumer USA.

General Motors, still recovering from a bankruptcy that led to its takeover by the United States government during the financial crisis, was also looking to expand its auto finance business. The car company had sold a majority stake in its in-house finance arm, the former GMAC, which became Ally Financial.

In July 2010, General Motors acquired AmeriCredit, a lender based in Fort Worth, for $3.5 billion.

The rise of both Santander Consumer and GM Financial are a testament to the profits that can be generated by making loans to people with checkered credit histories.

Some of that profit is fueled by securitization, the process of bundling often risky loans into bonds and selling them to investors like mutual funds and pensions.

In the auto market, securitization typically starts at the auto dealerships, which arrange loans for car customers. Lenders then take those loans, bundle them into bonds and then sell them to investors.

Along this chain, there is ample profit. The lenders can often make more loans at a lower cost than if they borrowed directly from the bond market. The Wall Street firms that package the deals earn hefty fees. The investors can earn relatively high returns on securities that the rating agencies have deemed low-risk.

The danger, though, is that lenders may be encouraged to lower their credit standards to churn out loans to keep up with investor demand. The deterioration that securitization can fuel has already begun as lenders reach lower and lower down the credit spectrum to find enough borrowers whose loans can then be put into investments. To entice more borrowers to buy cars, some lenders are lengthening the terms of their loans, for example.

Santander Consumer says it has not sacrificed credit quality in its bonds, and that no investors have lost money on any of its securitization deals. Still, in the $1.35 billion bond deal in September, the number of loans with longer terms rose and the loan-to-value ratio — or the amount of debt compared with the resale value of the cars — also increased, according to a report by Standard & Poor's Rating Service.

Auto lending has been good to Santander Consumers' Mr. Dundon. He owns a 13,556-square-foot house in Dallas with a putting green and five fireplaces. Through a company spokeswoman, Mr. Dundon declined to be interviewed for this article.

An avid golfer, Mr. Dundon, 43, has played with the likes of Tony Romo, the Dallas Cowboys quarterback. Pictures of such outings are posted on the company's website, and Mr. Dundon muses about the business lessons he has gleaned from the sport. After watching the Masters tournament at Augusta, Ga., he remarked how he was moved by the elite golfers competing for the top prize, a green jacket.

"We should all be inspired to seek out the equivalent of a green jacket in our work and life in general," Mr. Dundon wrote on his blog.

Video

The Remote Repo Man

As auto lenders reach out to those with poor credit, they are increasingly using starter interruption devices, technology that allows them to remotely disable a car, to spur timely payment.

Video by Sean Patrick Farrell on Publish Date September 25, 2014. Photo by By Sean Patrick Farrell on September 24, 2014. Photo John Gurzinski for The New York Times.

A Bet on Car Dependence

Mandy Gray of Boiling Springs, Pa., is unemployed and depends largely on her partner's $11-an-hour salary as a forklift operator. She says she has struggled to keep up with the $306 monthly payments on her Santander auto loan.

A lot is at stake not only for Ms. Gray, but for Santander Consumer.

The calculation by the lender is that Ms. Gray and thousands of other troubled borrowers will go to great lengths to keep their cars.

It is a reasonable wager.

For decades, even during rocky economic times, defaults on cars loans have remained relatively low.

In March, Ms. Gray, 35, received a $13,426.64 auto loan from Fifth Third Bank with a 17.72 percent interest rate. She bought a 2009 Hyundai. But five days later, Santander Consumer told her that her loan was "now owned by Santander Consumer," according to a letter from the lender reviewed by The Times. Ms. Gray, who has been taking online college courses, says she plans to use her financial aid money to catch up on missed car payments.

Americans are so dependent on their cars that investors are betting that they would rather lose their home to foreclosure than their car to repossession.

Or in the words of a Santander Consumer investor, "You can sleep in your car, but you can't drive your house to work."

Cracks in that theory are starting to emerge. Delinquencies on auto loans of 60 days or less are rising, and more Americans are losing their cars each month to repossession. Experian said 60-day loan delinquencies rose 8.6 percent in the third quarter of 2014, from a year ago.

Last year was star-crossed for Santander Consumer USA, its first as a publicly traded company. Shortly after Santander Consumer went public last January, one Wall Street analyst heralded the company as an "attractive way for investors to gain exposure to the auto lending market." Over the last year, shares of Santander Consumer have fallen roughly 23 percent.

Last year was also difficult for some Santander Consumer customers. Dane Carpe, of Creswell, Ore., borrowed $17,115.83 from the company at a 23.74 percent interest rate to buy a 2008 Dodge Charger, according to a copy of his loan document that was reviewed by The Times.

A former mortgage broker who declared bankruptcy, Mr. Carpe fell behind on his $449.94 monthly auto loan payments and has disputed with the lender over how his payments have been applied to his loan balance. On New Year's Eve, his car was repossessed, he said.

"I lived through the mortgage bubble, and this bubble is going to burst," he said.

More in This Series:

Rise in Loans Linked to Cars Is Hurting Poor

With a crackdown on payday lenders, subprime borrowers are increasingly using auto title loans, whose high interest rates can lead to repossession and financial ruin.

Miss a Payment? Good Luck Moving That Car

Subprime lenders are increasingly relying on technology that allows them to track and disable delinquent borrowers' vehicles with just a tap of a cellphone app.

Recommended article: Chomsky: We Are All – Fill in the Blank.
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Source : http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2015/01/26/investment-riches-built-on-auto-loans-to-poor/