As you can imagine, the financial crisis the world has experienced lately has affected car auto financing. Here are some of the changes you might see when you get ready to finance a new vehicle at your New Jersey auto dealers:
- 100 percent financing deals are scarce. Many lenders now want a down payment of between 10 and 15 percent, even from people with good credit.
- Fewer consumers will qualify for zero percent financing promotions. Unless your credit rating is extremely high, you may have to pay a regular interest rate between 7 and 10 percent.
- Lower trade-in values. Dealers are more cash strapped than before, and less willing to take a risk on whether they can sell your car after you trade it in.
- Smaller inventories. In the same way that lenders have put restrictions on consumer loans, they’re clamping down on dealer loans that let dealers get inventory.
- Fewer dealers. Even some of the largest dealerships in the country have been wiped from the map due to the economic crisis.
- Harder credit requirements. Unless your credit rating is way above average, you will probably have to pay a higher interest rate than before.
Ever since I was a small boy, I can remember dreaming of buying my own Chevrolet. You see, I grew up in Michigan, not too far from one of the Chevrolet plants near Flint. For us, in those days before Toyotas and Hondas could be found on the streets in droves, owning your own Chevrolet was something of a status symbol. It meant you were an adult, that you had arrived.
If you’re in a pinch when it comes to your credit rating, you’re not alone. I’ve been there. Many people have been there. One statistic recently published suggested that at least 25% of all Americans have credit difficulties.