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GM To Buy AmeriCredit Corp. For $3.5 Billion To Expand Subprime Lending

TOM KRISHER and DAVID PITT   07/22/10 07:03 PM ET   AP

Gm

DETROIT — General Motors is getting into the subprime lending business. And that means taxpayers are, too.

But these car loans aren't as risky as you might think.

GM, majority owned by taxpayers, is buying a company that makes car loans to shoppers with poor credit. Unlike home loans, though, the risk in subprime auto lending is relatively low and may reward GM. The company hopes to boost sales by making loans and leases to buyers that it must now turn away for lack of financing.

GM will pay $3.5 billion in cash for AmeriCredit Inc., a Fort Worth-based company with 800,000 customers and a $9 billion portfolio of subprime auto loans. GM's purchase will be made out of its $30 billion cash stockpile, one that is funded in part by the government.

AmeriCredit had already been helping GM with subprime loans, which now amount to 4 percent of the car company's sales. GM Chief Financial Officer Chris Liddell expects that to grow by a percent or two, a significant number considering that GM is on pace to sell over 2 million cars and trucks in the U.S. this year.

About 40 percent of U.S. customers have below prime credit scores, Liddell said. "Clearly there's an opportunity to bring more people into our showrooms and help them with finance."

Dealers and GM executives have complained for months that they're losing business because many customers can't get loans or leases.

Historically, the loan approval rate for borrowers with poor credit – those with scores below 620 – ran about 60 percent. Now, it's running at 9 percent.

"(GM) absolutely needed to add this segment of the market to meet the needs of the customers coming into our dealerships," Mike Jackson, CEO of AutoNation Inc., the largest auto dealer chain in the U.S., said after the deal was announced Thursday.

Customers with poor credit couldn't get an in-house loan from a GM dealer and faced additional hurdles to secure financing from an outside bank. Although access will improve, ultimately loans may not become easier to obtain because AmeriCredit will likely stand by its current lending criteria, said Melinda Zabritski, director of Automotive Credit at Experian, a credit reporting agency.

Toyota and Ford have their own finance companies, which enable them to offer sweeter deals. GM lost its ability to finance cars at cheaper interest rates when it sold control of its finance arm four years ago.

Auto lending, compared with other consumer loans, is fairly low risk. Banks or finance companies can repossess cars if owners stop paying. Drivers who fall behind on bills tend to pay their car payments ahead of other debt because they need transportation to get to work.

Fewer borrowers are falling behind on their car loans than a year ago, according to Experian. The 30-day delinquency rate hasn't changed dramatically in the last year, and currently remains below 3 percent for all auto loans. Auto repossessions for banks remain low at less than 1 percent of loans.

Under the deal, GM will pay $24.50 for each share of AmeriCredit, a 24 percent premium over Wednesday's closing price. Investors were happy with the deal, pushing up shares of AmeriCredit by more than 21 percent, to $23.91 on Thursday.

The sale, subject to AmeriCredit shareholder approval, is expected to close in the fourth quarter.

___

AP Auto Writer Dan Strumpf in New York contributed to this report.

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DETROIT — General Motors is getting into the subprime lending business. And that means taxpayers are, too. But these car loans aren't as risky as you might think.
DETROIT — General Motors is getting into the subprime lending business. And that means taxpayers are, too. But these car loans aren't as risky as you might think.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
josefhiggins
12:25 PM on 07/26/2010
I just hope this time, I'm able to claim the losses on next years tax return. And believe me this cycle will be repeated.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RayinStL
10:39 AM on 07/26/2010
Wow, shouldn't we be outraged? Let's get this straight, GM - the company WE own and had to bailout to keep them from going out of busines HAS NOW PURCHASED a company that will give outrageous interest rates to the very taxpayers that helped GM stay in business???? I had 2 coworkers buy cars at the same time. One a single manager (I assume with great credit) bought a Nissan Maxima. The other, a single mother of 2 works as a secretary bought a KIa Rio after spending her entire check trying to fix her old car. She's a higher risk and pays the same for her Kia as the Maxima. When did this become the norm? Higher risk so let's make sure you pay more. OK, you couldn't pay bills so let's give you a high bill to attach to your other bills to make sure you are destroyed. If you look at Science Fiction movies, the future becomes a place of corporations ruling (NOT big government). It's no longer science fiction. We have TeaParty people complaining about governemnt. Take a look at corporations.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
organicconnect
01:27 AM on 07/25/2010
All in all, I hope GM survives through these weird times. Sounds odd for me to say this because I have not been a fan of their engineering and now drive a Volvo. It is far and away superior to anything from GM I ever touched. That said, I got a chance to ride in a GM Hydrogen Fuel-Cell Equinox. All I could say was, "Wow!" I brought this to the attention of the publisher of Organic Connections magazine. Here's the article that was just published. (I am actually the webmaster of their site.) http://organicconnectmag.com/wp/2010/07/the-zero-emission-hydrogen-fueled-chevy/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dangerous Dan
Because I can!
10:55 AM on 07/24/2010
Notice the lack of devout Obama congregants?
(hands over ears) LaLaLaLa!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dangerous Dan
Because I can!
10:53 AM on 07/24/2010
The Government has to know, and probably pushed for this.
They have trusties and auditors on the board.
When in debt, spend more money.
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dwilson424
If you disagree teach me
04:11 PM on 07/23/2010
One question when will GM pay back the 56 billion?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dangerous Dan
Because I can!
10:46 AM on 07/24/2010
Right after the next $70B bailout from the Administration.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aNdYtm
02:48 PM on 07/23/2010
What is it that GM can't understand about SUB PRIME? Will they ever learn?

People BOYCOTT GM. Don't let them drive you in to a DEBT sink hole.

Borrowers of sub prime loans, don't borrow. Don't fall for these kind of loans.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dangerous Dan
Because I can!
10:49 AM on 07/24/2010
Who says this is a GM business decision.
The government may have suggested that this would be a good direction to head toward.
Got to take some of the asset heat of Freddie and Fannie.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Peter007
07:43 AM on 07/26/2010
There really is nothing in finance called " subprime". Thats a term the public uses so they can understand simple finance.
Lenders rate loans on a point basis. Its more of a spectrum rather than a good / bad rating. A borrower with a 670 credit score may be rated good while a similar or better borrower may have a 650 score. The guy with a 650 may be rated subprime and he may be a better risk due to criteria not included in the lenders formula.
11:49 AM on 07/23/2010
This is quite possibly the dumbest move I have ever heard...and smacks of political influence. Half the reason why GM ran into such massive problems was it's inability to properly manage it's loan risk portfolio under GMAC.

At a time when GM needs to be focused on reducing it's ridiculously expansive brands, correcting it's balance sheet by selling off worthless assets, and reducing it's overall debt exposure...it decides to spend $3.5 billion on a subprime loan company?

Something stinks here...and it's not just GM's cars.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Peter007
07:44 AM on 07/26/2010
It sounds like you are qualified to run GM.
Do you have any experience running any companies?
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steve11407
pending approval and won't be displayed until ...
11:39 AM on 07/23/2010
This is the ugly part of taxpayer ownership of whats supposed to be a private business. How is this fair to Chrysler or Ford.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DebtNavigation
Attorney and Author
09:49 AM on 07/23/2010
As a dog goes back to its vomit, so a fool repeats his stupidity - Proverbs 26:11
09:37 AM on 07/23/2010
So after selling houses to people who could not afford them GM now sells cars to people who can not afford them. - And of course there is no risk.

Never was.

Risk means the rich might lose. And that will not happen here as it did not happen in Mortgage subprimes. Hundreds of billions went into the pockets of the parasites. - So there was no risk.

Of course the PEOPLE lost - many times everything. But who gives a s**t? We are just people. It is the criminals making billions that run the economy of the planet. THEY have no risk. - That is what they buy politicians for: to shove the risk down the throat of those they just betrayed.

Where is George Washington and his gun when You need them?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sidplicity
Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banan
05:15 AM on 07/23/2010
Amazing just a few months ago GM was trying to sell Opel to raise its cash base. Opel still unsold and yet they still found the funds to buyout another company. But their broke.
02:54 AM on 07/23/2010
your tax dollars at work
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laaambchop
Cheerfulness is a sign of wisdom
10:50 PM on 07/22/2010
And the cycle begins anew...ahhhhh
10:01 PM on 07/22/2010
Basically what this boils down to is that Obama is now in the sub-prime loan business, aka loan sharking. They see an opportunity to take advantage of the credit disabled and will jack the interest rates to make more money. This is all being funded by our tax dollars, with no say in how its spent all to support his union buddies and to make sure the union employees have jobs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sidplicity
Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banan
05:13 AM on 07/23/2010
Bailout started and passed week of November before 2008 election. I'm sure Bush and company were doing the bailouts because they worried about union workers.