
Originally Posted by
Galactus
Jeez, there's a lot of patting-themselves-over-the-back here.
I work for a bank/financing company. And I can tell you from real experience that auto loans do not form a large portion of a bank's loan portfolio. They generate revenue more from traditional lending (commercial loans), although consumption loans (which include auto loans), do form a sizeable portion.
Actually, some KB's and savings banks don't even engage in auto loans. Too risky (as in our case), so we've limited borrowers to those within the group employees. And the auxillary services related to managing the portfolio (filing cases, repossession and warehousing expenses, etc.) can be staggering. We did explore the option of setting up and talked to several dealers. And from our experience, certain concessions on both sides were demanded and given. Everybody won. Too bad the negotiations fell through.
Great. Just what the world needs. A Mister-know-it-all.
Everybody's an expert after the fact. A Ben Bernanke-Joseph Stiglitz-Edward Prescott-Paul Krugman-Robert Barro-"Peter Schiff" all rolled into one.
What a crummy life we lead. Ho-hum. Pity the ignorant masses.
Even those people would be the first to claim they don't know everything about the crisis.
And yet here in our backyard, lies the Economics Messiah.
All hail!