auto dealer in black and red logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

A Good Deal

Rising auto loan delinquencies, though bad news, could be another opportunity for agents to help dealers come down from pandemic highs.

June 13, 2024
A Good Deal

Annualized, nearly 8% of auto loans slipped into delinquency in the fourth quarter of last year.

Credit:

Pexels/Karolina Grabowska

2 min to read


As last year ended after a 2022-23 cycle that saw 11 interest rate hikes, the dual pressure of the high rates and inflated prices started to reveal a crack in the consumer foundation.

A fourth-quarter report by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York showed automotive loan delinquencies were on the increase, especially among younger borrowers. The striking point of the shift was that the share of loans in arrears exceeded prepandemic levels.

Ad Loading...

Annualized, nearly 8% of auto loans slipped into delinquency in the quarter. The bank reported that the share in a state of serious delinquency – 90 days or more – hit about 2.7%, up from 2.2% a year earlier.

Consumer segments with higher rates of delinquency were millennial and low-income borrowers.

The report indicated that loans taken out in 2022 and 2023 were performing worse than those opened earlier. It theorized that higher vehicle prices and the possibility that consumers “may have been pressed to borrow more” at higher interest rates could be to blame.

Automotive loan debt was up by $12 billion quarter-over-quarter and by $55 billion year-over-year to $1.6 trillion. The bank said it’s been growing since 2011, though the average origination total grew by less than 1% per year from 2015 to 2020. Then in 2021, it surged 11%, followed by a 10% jump in 2022.

Though vehicle prices have been falling from pandemic highs, government stimulus payment savings have largely been spent and loan forbearances have disappeared, leading to rising delinquencies, particularly for credit card and automotive loan debt.

Ad Loading...

The development is another signal that the ease of pandemic-era selling has faded, making a return to fundamentals a must for dealers, particularly F&I departments, which can help balance the return of the auto buyer’s market.

Dealerships must transition from the high times of easy sales to more of a nose-to-the-grindstone work ethic, taking advantage of sales training to bone up on both time-tested approaches and new ones.

Awareness of a growing number of buyers, particularly younger ones, struggling with delinquency issues is good intelligence to keep in mind in the F&I office.

Hannah Mitchell is executive editor of F&I and Showroom. A former daily newspaper journalist, her first car was a hand-me-down Chevrolet Nova.

 

Originally posted on F&I and Showroom

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Dealer Ops

two cars on a billboard, No Hidden Fees
ComplianceMay 1, 2026

Dealer Ads and the FTC

The agency has made it clear in recent enforcement actions and warnings, in auto retail and other industries, that advertised prices must include all nonoptional costs to the consumer.

Read More →
Closeup of white car's headlight, front end
Dealer Opsby Hannah MitchellApril 17, 2026

Used Autos Supply Dwindles

The March shopping surge, despite high prices, cut into inventory by the most since the thick of the pandemic, Cox Automotive analysts calculated.

Read More →
hands making protective frame over red car, Risk Reality Check, Be Proactive, Auto Dealer Today logo
Dealer OpsApril 1, 2026

Managing Risk Effectively Through Changing Times

The variables influencing risk pricing have changed significantly over the past five years. Being proactive and responsive to emerging trends is not optional but essential.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Car key, stacks of coins, and a paper car cutout with AutoPayPlus logo, representing auto financing, loan terms, and vehicle affordability trends.
Dealer Opsby StaffMarch 31, 2026

Survey Reveals What Won't Fix What's Breaking Car Sales

AutoPayPlus says extra-long auto loans are trapping consumers and threatening the dealer trade-in cycle, and that the industry is leveraging the wrong tools to combat high MSRPs.

Read More →
Headshots of two male executives
Dealer Opsby StaffMarch 24, 2026

IA American Appoints Two Execs

Senior vice presidents of the company's agent and dealer channels chosen to support general agents and help auto dealers with sales and performance.

Read More →
Dealer Opsby StaffSeptember 8, 2025

Cox Automotive Acquires Inspection Firm

Full ownership of Alliance Inspection Management, or AiM, meant to unlock growth for Manheim inspection capabilities

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Dealer Opsby StaffAugust 26, 2025

Assurant Expands Partnership With Holman

Extended collaboration delivers training, products and performance development to 30 newly acquired Holman dealerships

Read More →
Dealer Opsby Hannah MitchellAugust 26, 2025

Franchises, Throughput Down in First Half

A handful of states see franchise growth through June, while EV sales per store boost overall business in U.S.

Read More →
Dealer OpsAugust 25, 2025

How to Build a High-Performance Sales and F&I Team

Performance and profits start with people chosen and led the right way.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Dealer Opsby Hannah MitchellAugust 19, 2025

Buy-Sells Up in Q2

Kerrigan metrics show there’s plenty of demand, though many sellers are waiting to pull the trigger.

Read More →