Ns1
No Lifer
^ lol
I have been thinking about starting a buy here pay here lot for imports. Have any of your customers used the loans to purchase cars? The sheer amount of people who walked away from mortgages has created huge opportunity for lending.
BTW I personally dont understand the rancor towards highland because of the thread. Dude is a small businessman following the laws and providing a service to people that cant afford it.
Why doesnt everyone who objected to the thread list their jobs and titles and the margins they use and if they pass your own litmus test.
They trying to cut down on that in CA
Curbs on Buy Here, Pay Here
The legislature is considering bills that would rein in some of the abusive practices of this segment of auto dealers.
http://articles.latimes.com/2012/jun/24/opinion/la-ed-loans-20120622
Legislation aiming to regulate the Buy Here Pay Here used car industry has survived key committee votes in Sacramento, bringing it significantly closer to final passage.
Bills by Assemblymen Bob Wieckowski (D-Fremont) and Mike Feuer (D-Los Angeles) won passage in a marathon Senate Judiciary Committee session Tuesday, just days before summer recess.
The Wieckowski bill, AB 1534, would require that Buy Here Pay Here dealers -- which provide their own financing on sales of used cars and typically sell to people with credit problems post fair market valuations on every car they sell. Feuers bill, AB 1447, requires dealers to provide 30-day limited warranties on the cars they sell and would prohibit use of GPS tracking devices without consent from customers.
Meanwhile, a bill by Sen. Ted Lieu (D-Torrance), sailed through the Assembly Judiciary Committee, which happens to be chaired by Feuer. It will be heard in the Appropriations committee next month. Like the Feuer and Wieckowski bills, Lieu's bill, SB 956, has already passed floor votes in its originating chamber.
Lieu's bill, SB 956, would require Buy Here Pay Here dealers to register as finance lenders with the California Department of Corporations and would cap interest on their loans at 17% plus the federal funds rate (currently at 0.25%). In addition, it would place restrictions on how and when dealers can repossess autos.
http://www.latimes.com/business/money/la-fi-mo-bhph-bills-advance-20120703,0,1431498.story