September 26, 2006 12:46 AM
Bad Credit Auto Loan Tips
This is a surprisingly nicely-written review of auto loan tips for bad-credit borrowers.
From This is a surprisingly nicely-written review of auto loan tips for bad-credit borrowers....:
The greatest abuses in bad credit auto lending come from dealers who artificially inflate the prices of their cars and or the interest rates charged for the financing. A common tactic is for a dishonest dealer "specializing in bad credit purchasers" to take a car normally sold for $3,000 and inflate the price to $6,000, take $1,500 down and finance the balance at 24 to 26%. The reality would be that the borrower not only obligates themselves to a contract at a very, very high interest rate but that the under lying debt and price for the car bear no realistic relationship to the value of the vehicle. This leaves the borrower in a position that ultimately they will default on the loan further ruining their credit. Otherwise they will complete the contract by which time they may have paid double or triple what they would have for the same car if they had purchased it from a legitimate dealer at a legitimate price. The watch word here is "caveat emptor," let the buyer beware, some dealers advertising they work with poor credit purchasers may be honest and forthright dealers. The best consumer protection is knowledge. Research the true value of the cars you are purchasing and try to pay only the wholesale cost plus a $200 to $500 profit for the dealer. In only the rarest of instances should you pay more than the retail price of the car.
Sometimes purchasing and financing a car through a dealer works to the buyers' advantage. A company dealing in the finance operation only must make all of their money from the financing where the dealer also makes part of their money from the sale of the vehicle. In some incidences the incentive to sell the vehicle for the dealer and can mean financing concessions or less constringent guidelines. Surprisingly, this emerges frequently as a situation when purchasing a brand new vehicle. With a sizable down payment it may actually be easier for borrowers with bad credit to obtain financing for a new vehicle financed by the car manufacturers own funding arms because of the company's incentive to sell their new cars. Purchasers of new vehicles can also be aided by the fact that interest rates are lowered in these transactions. Newer cars generally merit lower interest rates than older cars and amortization for new cars are longer too. The result maybe that the payment for purchasing a new car may be the same or lower than payments may be purchasing a used car.
10/03/06 | How To Get An Auto Loan After Bankruptcy?
09/26/06 | How To Get A Car Loan With Bad Credit?
09/26/06 | How To Avoid Auto Financing Traps?
09/20/06 | Capital One Auto Loan's Blank Check Program
09/20/06 | How Much Car Loan Can You Afford?
09/20/06 | 4 Steps Toward A Successful Auto Loan
09/11/06 | Avoid (or Correct) Upside-Down Bad Car Loans
09/11/06 | 8-Year Car Loan?
09/11/06 | Car Loans Getting Longer and Longer
09/11/06 | Cut Your Car's Financing Costs
09/10/06 | Different Types of Car Financing