Tag Archives: borrowers

Making Your Auto Loans for Bad Credit More Affordable

Typically, bad credit auto finances carry a much higher rate of interest in comparison to those offered for car loans with a good credit. But there are ways by which you could secure the much desired lower interest rates on your pre-approved car loan and to ensure this you are required to shop for your loan. Here is some information which could be of critical importance to bad credit borrowers who are planning to purchase a new or used vehicle.

To obtain lower auto loan rates on your bad or no credit auto loan, it is always desirable to pay a sizable cash advance or have a co-signer with a good credit reputation. This could even enable you to get an early approval and suitable loan repayment terms and conditions from a car finance lender. Alternatively, you could also keep the car or home equity as collateral towards security against the loan amount. But the car necessarily has to be a new one. In case you default on your monthly payments, the lender has the option of seizing the vehicle to recover his financing costs. Lenders consider people with a bad or poor credit to be risky borrowers and so with the intention of reducing their lending risks, they like to secure some money finances upfront.

Another important aspect of auto loans for bad credit is that such types of car financial solutions are normally offered for a much shorter duration as compared to the ones provided to good credit borrowers. Usually, the loan term varies from 24 to 48 months while that extended to good credit borrowers is for a period of 60 months. And in case there is no down payment, the amortization schedule could also be unfavorable since the monthly installments could be considerably higher. However, you have one more alternative. If you have a stable and regular monthly income, even if you have a sub-prime credit you could think of leasing a car to solve your commutation needs.

Nowadays there are plenty of online professional services who offer professional guidance to borrowers with a bad or poor credit history. Nonetheless, it is recommended to use the expertise offered by reputed service providers such as www.AutoLoanFinance.net by using these services, bad or poor credit borrowers, who dream of purchasing a car, could get proper guidance which is very much required when applying for auto loans for people with bad credit. This could help you to compare the quotes offered by different lenders within the shortest span of time by using the auto loan calculators which could ultimately assist you to get the much desired lower rates of interest and favorable loan terms and conditions that could make your financial solution very much cheaper as well as affordable.

The Casualties of Subprime Lending (Page 1 of 2)

Subprime lending has recently caused over 56 lenders to either go out of business or stop issuing subprime loans because of excessive foreclosure rates. The lending community made decisions in the last few years that dramatically eased a borrower’s qualifications with a resultant dramatic increase in foreclosures.

The housing demand was so strong that lenders started to compete for the insatiable mortgage demand by making qualifying very easy. One example was the creation of the “stated income” loan, or the “liar’s loan”. In the loan application, the borrower only had to “state” his income without showing any proof of that that income. Unfortunately about 60% of borrowers over-stated their income on their loan applications to qualify for their loans. A review of lending practices showed racial disparities in African-American and Hispanic low-income neighborhoods which had 1 ½ times as many subprime loans at higher interest rates and closing costs as compared to low-income white neighborhoods.

The lenders planned to compensate for higher default rates by charging higher interest rates and closing costs. But to make payments as low as possible for the borrowers, lenders developed low-initial interest rate loans (teaser rates) or negative amortization (Neg Am) mortgages. With a Neg Am loan, a borrower would actually owe more than he originally borrowed when he went to sell.

The teaser rates combined with adjustable interest rates caused borrowers to be hit with huge mortgage payment increases. Most borrowers couldn’t afford huge monthly payment increases and foreclosure rates began to rise. Lenders gave the loans on the assumption that the homeowner would do whatever necessary to make the payments, or the lender would get the property back in foreclosure and re-sell it for a profit in “hot real estate” markets.

Overlooked by lenders was the fact that real estate investors had become a major factor in the real estate market that had previously been dominated by the “retail buyers” or single family homeowners. The actual statistics went from investors owning about 2% of all single family homes in 1990 to almost 28% in 2006. This huge increase in investor ownership caused the “tail to wag the dog” and sent the real estate market into price advances that exceeded historical stock market gains.

Lenders were not discouraged, and to make loans even more affordable, developed 100% financing loans designed to eliminate “PMI” or Principal Mortgage Insurance by using an 80% first and a 20% second mortgage. This 80/20 program was so successful that it became the standard loan for most new homeowners for an 18 month period in 2003 – 2005. Now the borrower had two mortgages, the first at a traditional interest depending on the borrower’s credit rating and a second mortgage with a higher interest rate of 3% to 5% above the first mortgage rate.

We are now seeing huge default rates among 80/20 financings because the borrowers saw an opportunity to refinance their properties, cash out an equity profit without having to sell their homes, and just walk away without making any mortgage payments.