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Al Bingaman has been the store manager of Brenner Car Credit on Routes 11-15 in Hummels Wharf for the past four years. Most buyers can qualify for a used car loan there, but at 14.95 percent, a spokeswoman said.
Matthew Harris/The Daily Item /


Published January 08, 2009 07:41 am - The worldwide financial crunch is hampering those in the Central Susquehanna Valley who want to borrow money to buy a new car.


Car sales: No ‘EZ credit’ signs these days
Buyers need down payment to get new wheels

By Wayne Laepple
The Daily Item

The worldwide financial crunch is hampering those in the Central Susquehanna Valley who want to borrow money to buy a new car.

“It’s taken away the opportunity for any kind of loans,” said Robert Zimmerman, of Zimmerman’ Auto World, Selinsgrove.

Even so, sales have been “comfortably respectable” for this time of year, he said.

“We have the kinds of cars people want, and I think people are trying to move on after the stock market crash and the election,” he said.

A year ago, Zimmerman said, anyone could have walked into a showroom and had no trouble financing a new car at 100 percent and no down payment.

“Now we’re looking for down payments,” Zimmerman said.

An acceptable down payment is 10 percent of the purchase price, he said.

Financing that was available for anyone with a credit score of 500 or better is a thing of the past, and only those with a score of 720 or better qualify for the best rates today, Zimmerman said.

According to J.D. Power Associates, a consumer research and rating company, if your credit score is below 620, you may be required to put 20 percent down to qualify for a new car loan. In fact, if your score is below 550, you may as well forget getting a bank loan to buy a new car.

Your credit score isn’t the only criterion in determining whether you get a new car loan, Zimmerman said. Your income and other debts also play a role in your rating.

“We work with a number of banks,” he said. “Most of them have been generous, but they are conservative and are working under stricter criteria.”

“The customer has to have more down (payment) now,” he said.

Credit crunch time

Lending institutions in general have tightened up credit requirements, said Richard Grafmyre, president of FNB Bank in Danville.



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