• Home
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Business
  • Career
  • Consumer
  • Debt
  • Lifestyle
  • Retirement
  • Taxes

Personal Finance News

Latest News About Personal Finance

  • Blogger Net Worths
  • Top Personal Finance Blogs
  • Blogroll

A $45,000 Loan for a $27,000 Ride: More Borrowers Are Going Underwater on Car Loans

November 9, 2019 Leave a Comment

John Schricker took out a loan to buy a car in 2017. Then he took out another. And then another. In two years, the 40-year-old electrician signed up for four auto loans, each time trading in the previous car and rolling the unpaid balance into the next loan. He recently bought a $27,000 Jeep Cherokee with a $45,000 loan from Ally Financial Inc. The Wall Street Journal reports: 

Consumers, salespeople and lenders are treating cars a lot like houses during the last financial crisis: by piling on debt to such a degree that it often exceeds the car’s value. This phenomenon—referred to as negative equity, or being underwater—can leave car owners trapped.

Some 33% of people who traded in cars to buy new ones in the first nine months of 2019 had negative equity, compared with 28% five years ago and 19% a decade ago, according to car-shopping site Edmunds. Those borrowers owed about $5,000 on average after they traded in their cars, before taking on new loans. Five years ago the average was about $4,000.

Rising car prices have exacerbated an affordability gap that is increasingly getting filled with auto debt. Easy lending standards are perpetuating the cycle, with lenders routinely making car loans with low or no down payments that can last seven years or longer.

Related

Leave a Comment Cancel reply

Must Read

  • What's the Recommended Temperature for Vacant Home in Winter?
  • Professional Panda Cuddler as the World's Best Job for $32,000 per Year
  • How to Refinance a Paid Off Car
  • How to Reach a Live Person at IRS to Resolve Tax Problems
  • How to Cash Out Pension Plan Early
  • 401(k) Balances Hit a New All-Time High
  • 61% Now Living Paycheck to Paycheck
  • 36% Earning $100,000 or More Living Paycheck to Paycheck
  • Amazon Cash: Now You Can Pay With Cash on Amazon
  • Losses To Romance Scams Reached a Record $304 Million in 2020

Recent Posts

  • More Americans Are Using ‘Buy Now, Pay Later’ Services To Pay for Groceries
  • 5 Tips To Get The Best Value On An Insurance Policy
  • 61% Now Living Paycheck to Paycheck
  • 36% Earning $100,000 or More Living Paycheck to Paycheck
  • Two-Thirds of Americans Live Paycheck to Paycheck
  • The Hit to Your Pocketbook From Higher Gasoline Prices: $2,000 a Year
  • Uber Now Lets You See How Many One-Star Ratings You Received From Drivers
  • Survey: 7 In 10 Americans Living Paycheck To Paycheck

Connect With Us

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
Home · About · Terms · Privacy · Contact · Copyright © 2023 · Personal Finance News