2015-11-21wsj.com

Subprime auto lending is shifting into higher gear, raising some concerns in Washington where top financial regulators have sounded alarms about this category of loans. Over the six months through September, more than $110 billion of auto loans have been originated to borrowers with credit scores below 660, the bottom cutoff for having a credit score generally considered "good," according to a report Thursday from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Of that sum, about $70 billion went to borrowers with credit scores below 620, scored that are considered "bad."

... The sum in that category has nearly reached the same level as in 2006, raising questions about the health of the nation's auto-lending portfolio and drawing uncomfortable comparisons to the rise in subprime mortgages that helped fuel the housing collapse, financial crisis and recession.

There are now more subprime auto loans than there were subprime mortgage loans in the last crisis (though the total dollar value is of course much lower).



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