On the road and in the red

Higher prices and longer loans are pushing new-car buyers into a debt spiral. Here's how to climb out.

It sounds like a great deal: Buy a car and finance it for five, six, or even seven years. Payments are smaller. You can buy more car. And automakers and banks make it easy to do.

So what's the hitch? Long-term debt.

By not paying off their loans fast enough, car owners run two financial risks down the road. They could end up still owing money on their old car when they go to buy a new one. Worse, they might owe more on their vehicle than it is worth.

Such problems have become more pronounced as the price of new cars has risen - to more than $25,000 on average last year - and auto companies have eased credit terms to keep cars moving off the lot.

"It's a vicious cycle," says Peter Humleker, a former auto dealer and now consumer advocate and author of the e-book "Car Buying Scams." "Consumers just keep digging themselves a bigger, deeper hole."

The only way out is to buy a less expensive car or to hang onto the old one until it's paid off, says Rob Gentile, head of the car-buying service at Consumer Reports.

Last week, Warner Smith bought a 2004 Honda Civic to commute to his computer-networking job in Elgin, Ill. Looking for low payments, he signed up for a five-year, 2.9 percent loan. Since the interest rate was no lower for shorter-term loans, Mr. Smith decided to go long term with payments just under $300 a month. But "I'm keeping my options open," he says. He's now considering forking out $370 each month to pay off the loan in three years - a route some financing experts say is worthwhile.

By accepting longer loan terms, more and more consumers end up buying new cars while still making payments on their old ones. In 2004, 38 percent of shoppers who bought a new car on credit still owed an average of $3,686 on their trade-in, according to Edmunds.com, a consumer car-buying guide in Santa Monica, Calif. As a result, the money they owed on their trade-in was often rolled into the payments on the new car.

By signing up for long-term financing, "you're making a commitment that you're keeping this car around quite some time," says Mr. Gentile.

Nevertheless, after a few years, many buyers' financial situation or automotive needs have changed, experts say. Others, still in debt after the warranty expires, face big repair bills on top of monthly car payments.

At the root of the phenomenon is the easy credit that dealers and bankers have been offering for car loans.

After 9/11, automakers raced to shore up sales with zero percent financing and big cash incentives. Thezero interest loans were offered mostly over periods of three years or less. Only buyers with solid credit records qualified. Rates for longer-term loans were higher.

Now, the average new-car loan runs 62 months, up from 50 months in 2001, according to a recent Power Information Network (PIN) survey, an affiliate of J.D. Power and Associates.

"The terms of the transaction are all working to make the [consumer's] financial situation worse," says Tom Libby, a PIN analyst in Troy, Mich.

One other problem: Cars are depreciating faster because dealers are slapping discounts on new models. Those discounts averaged $2,367 last month, down from last July's record, but still historically high, according to Edmunds.com. Because the market is flooded with new cars, the market for used models has shriveled.

Even without accelerated depreciation, a seven-year loan encourages buyers to pay off their cars more slowly than they depreciate. Owing more for a car than it is worth is known in the industry as being financially "upside down." (Bankers call it being "under water.") To make matters worse, longer loan terms often come with a higher interest rate. Rolling money owed on a trade-in into a new-car loan raises that rate further.

Many buyers who opt for long-term loans have little cash for down payments. "In reality, they're trying to buy more car than they can afford," says Phil Reed, Edmunds.com's consumer-advice editor and author of "Strategies for Smart Car Buyers." "Many car-shoppers today are making the mistake of thinking in terms of monthly payments rather than total cost."

Automakers say loans that last more than five years represent a small part of their business and are targeted at buyers of expensive "specialty" vehicles, such as conversion vans. At General Motors Acceptance Corp., GM's finance arm, only 1 percent of vehicles are financed for longer than 60 months.

"This is a marketplace dynamic," driven by what consumers know they can afford, says David Jones, vice president of planning with GMAC. "There are some situations where you have to go for the longer term for affordability. The consumer has to do the research."

More buyers seem to sign up for long-term loans on foreign cars, perhaps because of their reputation for reliability. For example, 13 percent of vehicle loans financed by Toyota Motor Credit run longer than 60 months.

Auto financing terms longer than five years are even more prevalent among "second-tier Japanese brands," such as Mitsubishi, Isuzu, and Suzuki, says Gentile, as well as Korean brands, because those companies cater to less wealthy buyers. Some of these cars depreciate as much as 50 percent in their first year on the road.

Many of these buyers might have considered leasing in the past. But starting in 2002, automakers pushed low-rate, long-term financing with unprecedented loan lengths of up to 84 months. (Few buyers who took those loans had good enough credit to qualify for the best interest rates, Gentile says.)

Prior to that, automakers had encountered the same financial difficulties that many car owners now face. By emphasizing vehicle leases, car companies found that when cars were turned in at the end of the lease, they weren't worth as much as they had expected. Carmakers have now shifted this depreciation risk to consumers by subsidizing long-term financing rather than leasing.

Between April 2002 and April 2003,leasing fell from 19.2 percent of the market to 13.2 percent, while financing grew from 44.1 percent to 52.5 percent, according to data from Edmunds.com. Leasing has made something of a comeback in the past few weeks, and some dealers are now offering five-year leases.

For those who find themselves stuck in a long-term loan, the best course of action is to do whatever possible to pay off the loan early, says Jim Teahn, a spokesman for MyVesta, a consumer financial-education organization. If you're thinking of signing up, hold off until you can build up a bigger down payment, he urges.

How to buy a great new car without the heavy debt

As more and more consumers use long-term loans to buy new cars, they're finding that they end up owing more than the car is worth.

To avoid that trap, consider these alternatives before you sign on the dotted line:

• Find a cheaper car. Hard as this advice may be to stomach, it is also the best step you can take, experts emphasize. You shouldn't buy more car than you can afford.

While many consumers today still crave sport utility vehicles, minivans are often cheaper, offer more room, and provide better fuel economy. In addition, American and Korean manufacturers offer solid cars that sell for thousands of dollars less than their Japanese and European counterparts. And their quality is improving.

• Consider a car with the lowest depreciation rate possible. Consumer Reports and several personal finance magazines including Kiplinger and Money publish predicted depreciation rates. Intellichoice.com also calculates how a car will depreciate for a fee.

• Save up for a bigger down payment. A rule of thumb is every additional $1,000 you put down on a car lowers your monthly payments by about $50 a month.

More money may also enable you to shorten the length of the loan and, as a result, obtain a lower interest rate.

• If you don't drive a lot of miles and take good care of your car, consider a short-term lease. Leases require no down payment and usually don't last longer than three to five years.

But leasing has its disadvantages, including mileage limitations and the fact that you won't own the car at the end of the term.

• If you already are stuck with an auto loan that extends 60 months or more, do everything possible to make extra payments to pay down the principal. Jim Teahn of MyVesta, a consumer financial-education organization, notes that you may have to call the finance company to find out where to send extra payments so they're not just applied to the next month's interest.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
QR Code to On the road and in the red
Read this article in
https://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0524/p14s03-wmgn.html
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
https://www.csmonitor.com/subscribe