Deportation policies and due diligence blind spots are exposing hidden risks in the U.S. consumer ABS market.
The market is facing a new kind of crisis — not of defaulting borrowers, but of disappearing ones. As mass deportations and tightening immigration enforcement under the Trump administration continue, lenders are grappling with the fallout: when borrowers are suddenly deported or lose legal status, collateral recovery becomes nearly impossible.
This emerging dynamic is now triggering more bankruptcies among subprime lenders and forcing rating agencies to factor immigration policy risk into their surveillance and credit actions. In September, S&P even placed several subprime auto ABS classes on credit watch, citing “the cumulative effect of immigration law and enforcement actions” — a potential first for the market.In a recent Structured Credit Investor article, Joseph Cioffi, Davis+Gilbert’s Chief Operating Partner and Chair of the Bankruptcy, Creditors’ Rights + Finance Practice Group, was quoted extensively on how unpriced risks are reshaping securitization performance.
“Subprime borrowers are disproportionately vulnerable to shocks — economic, political, and now technological,” Joseph said. “Over time, those risks have only grown.”
Joseph has long warned that longer loan terms, rising borrower leverage, and complacency were stretching subprime lending to its limits. The current political climate, he notes, is merely adding new pressures to an already fragile system.
Recent bankruptcies like Tricolor Auto and PrimaLend reveal systemic weaknesses: misplaced trust, lax diligence, and an industry chasing yield over verification. As Joseph puts it: “No amount of credit enhancement protects you from counterparties not doing what they say they’re doing. You have to protect yourself up-front with diligence, inspection and audit rights.”
🔗 SCI subscribers can read the full article here: https://www.structuredcreditinvestor.com/news-analysis/asset-backed-finance/84367/sci-in-focus:-vanishing-borrowers-the-unpriced-risk-in-securitisation
