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Credit crunch in U.S. slams the brakes on Valley car deals

Published: Fri, October 3, 2008 @ 12:00 a.m.

By Don Shilling

Car buyers are forced into larger down payments and longer loans.

Buying a car isn’t as easy as it used to be, at least if you need financing.

Down payments are up. Loan terms are longer, and banks aren’t rolling over old debt into a loan for a new car. All of it’s being scrutinized more closely by loan officers.

“Deals that used to fly out of here don’t anymore,” said Kevin Funk, finance manager at Stadium GM Superstore in Salem.

And if you are looking for a cut-rate lease, don’t bother.

“The days of the $189-a-month Chevy Trailblazer or Jeep Liberty are gone,” said Chuck Eddy of Bob and Chuck Eddy Chrysler Dodge Jeep in Austintown.

Automakers and banks either have abandoned leases or made terms unfavorable, dealers said.

The changes have come recently in the wake of the nation’s credit crisis.

The economy has been thrown into turmoil as a flood of subprime mortgages — special deals for home buyers with marginal credit — led to a wave of foreclosures and soured investments by Wall Street banks.

Much the same had been happening with car financing, said Barry Gonis, general manager of Spitzer Chevrolet in North Jackson. Lenders were eager to make deals that made little financial sense because they could bundle the loans and sell them as securities to investors, he said.

For example, lenders were routinely lending 120 percent to 140 percent of the value of new car purchase. Car buyers would use the additional money to pay off what they owed on their previous cars and pay the taxes on the sales.

Now banks are lending only enough for the purchase of the new car.

Used-car deals are even more difficult, Funk said. Lenders are basing loans on the wholesale value of the car — what dealers would pay at auction — instead of the retail value. That lowers the loan amount and reduces the financial risk for the lenders if the loan defaults. It also means car buyers have to produce a larger down payment.

Terms for car loans are growing longer, dealership officials said. Loans of 60 or 66 months are average, but they sometimes extend to 84 months.

Not much has changed in terms of interest rates, officials said. Buyers with good credit will pay about 6 percent for a car loan, but those with worse credit will be charged more. Interest rates for buyers with marginal credit run between 13 percent and 16 percent, but rates for those with bad credit can run as high as 20 percent or 25 percent.

Buyers are likely to go through a more detailed credit check these days, Funk said. Buyers with a credit score below 640 automatically must present proof of income, he said. In the past, income checks were done on a case-by-case basis.

While financing deals have changed, leasing deals have almost evaporated.

“It’s been a culture shock,” Eddy said.

Leases made up 42 percent of all new car deals in the Mahoning Valley in the first eight months of this year.

Recently, however, automakers have decided they no longer are willing to take financial losses in order to keep customers coming back to dealerships every three years for a new lease, Eddy said.

Funk said buyers are facing monthly payments that are $100 or $150 higher when they finance a vehicle instead of leasing it. Plus, they are taking six-year loans instead of three-year leases.

People who own sport-utility vehicles also can be in for a shock when they come in to buy a new vehicle, Funk said. Values have plummeted, so they have less trade-in value.

“Usually people get mad and go check somewhere else,” he said.

Despite the changes in financing and leasing, the officials said their sales were good last month. Instead of staying out of the market, buyers are coming up with the larger down payments or taking longer-term loans to make deals work, they said.

September sales information for area dealers will be released later this month by the Automobile Dealers Association of Eastern Ohio.

shilling@vindy.com


Comments

1 localobserver (13 comments)posted 1 year, 1 month ago

Frankly people, is this truly bad news? That potential buyers have to pay a reasonable down payment - or pay off their old car loans? As for the disappearance of leases - again, they've never made economic sense. Leases have long been over-used by a public that never wants to pay the real costs for anything. Most of this sounds to me like a return to more common sense.

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2 jetercp (18 comments)posted 1 year, 1 month ago

this is the kind of stuff that happens when u put a republican in office. sorry people, but i cant believe you didnt see it coming. i'm no genius and i was able to see that our country is being destroyed.
figure it like this...
i go to niagra falls ever year. this past summer i had to pay $1.01 in american to get $1.00 canadian. about 5 years ago i payed $15.00 american and got $20.50 in canadian back.
look how our dollar has literally taken a negative equity under george bush.
why did u guys put him in office? seriously? was he really the best you could do?

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3 COUNTRYBOY (1 comments)posted 1 year, 1 month ago

I had decent credit not too bad but not that great... I needed a car and local dealerships were telling me $5000 down! finnaly one salesman told me to go see Matthew at JD Byrider on market st... they got me a car with $500 down and got me into a really nice car with a 3year warranty!

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4 captaincheese (3 comments)posted 1 year, 1 month ago

This is the problem with having so much of our economic spending based on credit. Sure it would be nice if people could save for the entirety of the price of their car but those days went away in the 1920. If everyone who wants a new car waits until they can afford it, The big 3 American auto manufacturers will go out of business. Possibly Nissan, Honda, and Toyota as well.

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5 dmets (560 comments)posted 1 year, 1 month ago

If you look back on the whole banking situation, the biggest problem was not keeping mortgage companies and banks separate. If that would have been followed and kept in place then the mortgage companies would have to eat the foreclosed houses and cash they lost and maybe even close. But the bank would not have all debit to carry too, and still be safe for the people.

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6 zieg2003 (82 comments)posted 1 year, 1 month ago

I've never had to put anything down, not for my house and not for my vehicles, ontop of that I even had negative equity on my trade in vehicle and rolled it over into my new car payment. I wonder has that even changed for low risk buyers too. COUNTRY BOY, $5000 down? Good lawd, how much was the car and where'd you go, never go to sweeneys their the biggest rip off intown. Toyota, Nissan, and Honda will never go out of business being that they simply make much better, quality, energy, and gas saving vehicles.

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7 prodgodq (49 comments)posted 1 year, 1 month ago

"Toyota, Nissan, and Honda will never go out of business being that they simply make much better, quality, energy, and gas saving vehicles."

-Toyota's sales were down 34 percent last month. They are now going to have to resort to the same sales incentives as
the Detroit three, which they have never had to do before.

Never say "never".

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