Does First Republic represent the beginning of the end of a banking crisis or is it merely the end of the beginning stage of banking turmoil set in motion by the run on Silicon Valley Bank (SVB)? To successfully navigate the uncertainty, below are five areas of concern and the tools to address them.
The third year of the pandemic brings with it questions of when normalization might occur in subprime auto lending and securitization. All eyes are on supply shortages, which have kept used vehicle prices in the stratosphere, and inflation, which could cause consumers financial distress. With these issues in mind, in a recent article in Structured Credit Investor, we compared Credit Chronometer’s...
360° Market Study of Subprime Auto Participants
NEW YORK, June 24, 2020 – Auto market participants are expecting subprime auto loan performance to deteriorate, and many predict COVID-19 will have a long-term impact on the sector. However, participants also show signs of resiliency, according to the second annual market study released today by Davis & Gilbert LLP’s Credit Chronometer.
On Wednesday, July 15, 2020, the Davis & Gilbert Insolvency, Creditors' Rights & Financial Products practice group and authors of Credit Chronometer will be presenting a webinar focused on the subprime auto market. Industry players — originators, investors, servicers, trustees and their advisors — will especially find topics discussed of interest.
On Wednesday, June 24, 2020, the Davis & Gilbert Insolvency, Creditors' Rights & Financial Products practice group and authors of Credit Chronometer will be presenting a webinar focused on the subprime auto market. Industry players — originators, investors, servicers, trustees and their advisors — will especially find topics discussed of interest.
NEW YORK, May 21, 2019 – Subprime auto loan performance is expected to deteriorate soon, according to a 360-degree market study released today by Credit Chronometer, a microsite authored by Joseph Cioffi, partner at Davis & Gilbert LLP and respected authority on credit markets.