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- Posted August 31, 2010
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Business - Economy Late payments on auto loans fall in 2nd quarter

NEW YORK (AP) -- In another sign that borrowers have taken tighter control of their debt, late payments on auto loans dropped in the second quarter.
The rate of payments 60 days or more past due dropped to 0.53 percent of outstanding auto loans in the April-to-June period, from 0.73 percent a year ago, according to credit reporting agency TransUnion.
The drop in the auto loan delinquency rate mirrors declines in late credit card and mortgage payments, according to TransUnion's review of 27 million credit reports in its database. Its records represent about 10 percent of the population with active credit accounts.
Meanwhile, new loans written during the quarter rose 18.7 percent, TransUnion said. And the average size of an auto loan edged up slightly, to $12,643 from $12,560 a year ago.
The change reflects an uptick in car purchases, said Peter Turek, automotive vice president in TransUnion's financial services group. Although the number of new loans hasn't returned to pre-recession levels, he said the increase in originations means that buyers are taking advantage of automakers' aggressive sales promotions.
The delinquency rate rose in only three states: Rhode Island, where it reached 0.74 percent; Utah, at 0.71 percent; and Montana, at 0.38 percent. Overall, rates were below the national average in 28 states and Washington, D.C.
Mainly because of seasonal patterns, TransUnion expects the auto delinquency rate to tick up to about 0.6 percent by the end of the year. Delinquency rates on auto loans tend to fall in the first half of the year and remain flat or rise later in the year.
The figure remains still slightly higher than the historical norm. Turek said auto sales will have to return to more normal levels -- about 16 million cars per year from roughly 11 million now -- for the delinquency rate to fall further.
Published: Tue, Aug 31, 2010
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