TSLA381.610-23.44%
GM78.950-1.48%
F14.000-0.11%
RIVN14.890-0.21%
CYD49.2500.4%
HMC25.580-0.41%
TM167.230-2.5%
CVNA64.815-1.855%
PAG176.7101.71%
LAD297.0801.93%
AN192.1603.86%
GPI318.2503%
ABG199.4503.25%
SAH81.4300.85%
TSLA381.610-23.44%
GM78.950-1.48%
F14.000-0.11%
RIVN14.890-0.21%
CYD49.2500.4%
HMC25.580-0.41%
TM167.230-2.5%
CVNA64.815-1.855%
PAG176.7101.71%
LAD297.0801.93%
AN192.1603.86%
GPI318.2503%
ABG199.4503.25%
SAH81.4300.85%
TSLA381.610-23.44%
GM78.950-1.48%
F14.000-0.11%
RIVN14.890-0.21%
CYD49.2500.4%
HMC25.580-0.41%
TM167.230-2.5%
CVNA64.815-1.855%
PAG176.7101.71%
LAD297.0801.93%
AN192.1603.86%
GPI318.2503%
ABG199.4503.25%
SAH81.4300.85%

Auto loan market shifts as student loan delinquencies distort subprime scores

The resumption of student loan reporting has pushed many borrowers into subprime lending, reshaping risk metrics and tightening auto credit availability.
The resumption of student loan reporting has pushed many borrowers into subprime lending, reshaping risk metrics and tightening auto credit availability.

The reactivation of student loan repayments in late 2024 is transforming the auto finance landscape, especially within the subprime credit segment. According to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, more than 2 million Americans experienced significant declines in their credit scores, with many dropping by 100 points or more, after student loan delinquency reporting resumed. While this shift didn’t necessarily reflect deteriorating auto repayment behavior, it caused a surge in subprime classifications, complicating credit risk assessments for lenders. 

Despite the increase in consumers falling below the 620-credit-score threshold, serious auto loan delinquencies (90+ days past due) remained stable in the first quarter. At the same time, auto loan balances dropped by $13 billion to $1.64 trillion, marking only the second quarterly decline since 2011, which signals tightening affordability and cautious lending behavior.

Recent FICO data also revealed that millions of borrowers have experienced sudden credit score declines due to student loan defaults, often unrelated to their actual performance on auto loans. These shifts have artificially inflated the subprime borrower pool, making traditional credit scores less effective in predicting actual repayment behavior. 

For auto dealers, this means a shrinking pool of qualified buyers and increased uncertainty around financing approvals, particularly for younger or lower-income consumers. Lenders now face the challenge of evaluating risk more granularly and adapting underwriting practices to better reflect borrower behavior beyond static credit scores.

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Here’s why it matters:

When financing becomes tighter, particularly for subprime consumers who have historically driven much of the used car market, retail volume suffers. The apparent expansion of the subprime pool due to student loan reporting changes presents both a challenge and an opportunity:

  • Challenge: Traditional credit score cutoffs may exclude reliable borrowers.
  • Opportunity: Dealers who understand the nuances of this “new” subprime group can work with lenders to push more deals through. 

Understanding these dynamics helps dealers adapt their F&I strategies, engage smarter lender partners, and educate buyers who may be surprised by higher-than-expected rates. 

Key takeaways: 

  • Subprime borrower pool has grown, but artificially:
    About 2 million borrowers were pushed into subprime credit tiers after student loan delinquencies reappeared on credit files. However, many of them are still current on auto loans.
  • Auto loan delinquencies remain high:
    The Fed reports that serious auto loan delinquencies did not increase, even as student loan delinquencies surged from <1% to 7.7%.
  • Credit score tiers don’t tell the full story:
    Roughly 3% of subprime borrowers only dropped below 620 due to student loans, not missed auto payments. These borrowers behave differently from typical subprime consumers.
  • Loan affordability dropped sharply for subprime consumers:
    A 1–2 tier drop in credit score can increase interest rates by 300–600 basis points, drastically increasing monthly payments and pricing buyers out.
  • Credit availability is unlikely to improve soon:
    Even with potential Fed rate cuts, high yield spreads and lender caution will likely keep auto loan rates elevated and financing constrained for at least six months.
Read More
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