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Is Your Auto Loan Affordable?

Brien Joyce Vice President EFG Companies
Contributing Author:
Brien Joyce
Vice President
EFG Companies

According to a recent study from Bankrate.com, the average new-car price tag is too high for the majority of medium-income U.S. households. Here’s the breakdown:

In May, Kelley Blue Book updated the average new-vehicle transaction price to $33,261.

Using that transaction price, Bankrate applied the traditional 20-4-10 rule to conduct the study – i.e.:

  • a down payment of 20 percent
  • a four-year loan
  • principal, interest and insurance payments accounting for 10 percent of the household’s gross income

From looking at your own portfolios, you probably know that the majority of American consumers don’t put 20 percent down on their vehicle, and they are often financing for upwards of seven years. The fact that consumers don’t use the 20-4-10 rule should give you a good picture of the state of American finances in comparison to vehicle prices.

It should come as no surprise that Bankrate’s study came back showing that only one metro area could afford the average-priced new vehicle – Washington, D.C., where the median income is nearly $100,000.

Despite the fact that, according to Bankrate, most households can’t afford to purchase a new vehicle, new unit sales are still on par with last year’s levels. The most recent LMC Automotive/J.D. Power forecast puts 2017 new vehicle sales volume in the low 17 million-unit range for the year.

Categories
Economy

If Your Customers Can’t Pay, You Will!

 

Mark Rappaport President EFG Companies
Mark Rappaport
President
Simplicity Division
EFG Companies

According to a recent survey from Bankrate.com, 63 percent of Americans say they are unable to handle a $500 car repair bill; and, only one out of five consumers making less than $30,000 said they had enough emergency savings set aside to handle an unexpected bill.

In addition, a Pew Charitable Trusts study found that six out of every 10 American households reported experiencing a financial shock during the last year, with major car repairs and lost income ranking among the most common.

What does this tell us? That those rosy figures of economic growth don’t match the current financial stresses of Americans. The fact is, with inflation increasing the costs of food, healthcare, clothing, utilities, etc., and slow wage growth, many Americans are finding it more difficult to pay in to their “rainy day fund”.