Almost every negative thing
happening in the car business – in particular, ludicrous technical complexity
for the sake of electronic gimmickry and also to cope with diminishing returns
federal “safety” and emissions mandates – could be gotten under control by the
simple expedient of cutting off the monopoly money/debt-financing that makes it
all possible.
The seven year loan.
“Free” money (zero or very
low interest).
Give-away leases.
The car industry is riding a
bubble that’s proportionately as large as the housing bubble of a decade ago.
And it is going to pop. For the same reason that a wave has to crest and wash
ashore, once set in motion.
Signs of trouble abound. They
build them – but no one comes. Not without inducements that amount to
give-aways.
For several years now the car
manufacturers have been resorting to truly desperate measures to prop up new
car “sales” – in air quotes because it’s a dubious proposition to describe as a
“sale” a transaction that involves exchanging the item for a sum
insufficient to cover the cost of its manufacture, plus a profit sufficient to
make the exercise worthwhile.
Yet that is exactly what is
going on.
As new car prices rise, the
cash back offers, dodgy leases and other “incentives” necessary to move them
off the lot also rise in frequency and inanity. Examples include the leasing of
electric cars for less than the cost of a monthly cell phone contract (Fiat
made just such an offer; see here) and “below invoice” transactions that rely
on the manufacturer (e.g., Ford) paying a dealer to “sell” a car (e.g.,
manufacturer to dealer incentives) for the sake of getting rid of it, getting
it off the books.
Or rather, onto someone
else’s books.
This financial flimflam works
for awhile because – just like the housing flimflam – a shell game is being
played.
The dealer finances the
acquisition of a new car, which he buys from the manufacturer; he then puts the
car on his lot for sale. He pays interest each month on his loan, just like an
ordinary person who has bought a car on debt (the honest name for a loan). Each
month that comes and goes with the car still on his lot is another month of
carrying costs for him.
Selling the car – that is,
transferring the debt load – becomes a matter of increasing urgency.
In order to entice a buyer –
that is, the next-tier-debtor – he resorts to every measure available,
including “special offers” and (here we go again) extremely dodgy financing.
His goal is not so much to sell the car to someone who can afford it but to
offload the debt.
Onto a bank or other lender.
Eventually, the taxpayer –
when the bank collapses and the government bails it out.
Once the papers are signed
and the car is driven away, it is no longer the dealer’s problem. He no longer has
to worry about it. If the “buyer” fails to make the payments, it is now the
lender’s problem.
And that problem is written
off, in its turn, when it becomes necessary to do so. The bank makes up the
loss via interest and fees on other debt. Or by re-selling the repo’d
vehicle at exorbitant interest to another debtor.
Rinse, repeat.
The dealer, meanwhile, has
made a “sale” – and it is so recorded and reported, adding another log to the
swaying Jenga tower.
Sound familiar?
But wait – there’s more!
As the ever-more-desperate
measures to prop up new car sales become ever-more-desperate and more and more
people who really can’t afford new cars “buy” them anyway, it depresses the
used car market. Why “buy” a used car, after all, when you can “buy” a brand-new
one for about the same monthly payment?
The used car market is
cratering – and that is a sure sign the fat lady is clearing her throat.
Remember: Interest rates on
new cars are lower (even nonexistent) and the loan/debt can be extended over a
preposterously long period – seven years is now routine – while the loan/debt
on the used car must be of shorter duration because of the greater and faster
depreciation on the used car. The typical three-year-old car is worth about 75
percent of what it was worth when new – and will only be worth about 50 percent
after another three years. Writing a loan/debt on an asset that will almost
certainly be worth less than the balance due on the loan before the loan can be
paid off is what you call a bad deal.
It cannot go on much longer.
The loan/debt limit has
probably already been reached. Seven years is a kind of Event Horizon for car
loans because after seven years, almost every car – regardless of make or model
or what it sold for when it was new – will be worth less than 50 percent of
what it sold for when it was new. They can’t keep pushing off the paid-for date
in order to keep “sales” from wilting, permanently.
This is why the bum’s rush to
ride-sharing; to the rent-by-the-hour (via an app) business model that GM
(Maven) and Ford (the firing of Mark Fields) and pretty much the entire car
industry have embraced as their only possible savior. The people running major
companies are many things but idiots they are not – some superficial evidence
to the contrary notwithstanding.
Poltroons and greedheads,
certainly. But not dummies.
They know that they can’t
keep pushing out loans indefinitely to sell cars. It is not tenable, both
because of the debt load (unsupportable) and depreciation, which imposes a
physical limit on loan duration. Hence the new rent-by-the-app (and hour)
business model. It is the only way the business can continue without going out
of business.
Either that or economic
sanity returns.
The government stops
mandating diminishing returns emissions rigmarole, for instance. And here’s a
real whopper of an idea: We get scientists, not politicians and regulators – to
prove that harm (real harm, not some ugsome bureaucrat’s hypothetical) would
result from dialing back the current rigmarole to, say, model year 2000
standards.
Consider: Were new cars
“dirty” in 2000? Were the skies suffused with smog? People choking and
coughing, falling comatose into gutters? No, to all of the above. The fact is
the cars and the air have been clean for decades – but the EPA continues to
pretend otherwise, to maintain the fiction of the need for its continued
existence.
And it goes without saying –
or should – that how many air bags a new car has (whether several or none at
all) ought to be none of the government’s business.
Same for the presence or
absence of back-up cameras and anti-whiplash head rests and whether the car can
do an egg-beater roll without its roof crushing. The fact that some people want
to be parented doesn’t mean the government has the right to parent the rest of
us. Let those who want and need adult diapers go ahead and wear them, if they
like.
So, the good news out of all
this bad news is that it must soon come to an end. The cost-no-objecting and
mandating; the noxious, suffocating parenting.
It is going to end – because
it cannot continue.
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