https://twitter.com/OccupyWisdom/status/983137195874713600
Did the Morgan Stanley Developed Market Economic Cycle Indicator just put in a top? h/t ZeroHedge pic.twitter.com/3XJUEcoo2O
— Alastair (@StockBoardAsset) April 8, 2018
https://twitter.com/OccupyWisdom/status/982818315440656384
https://twitter.com/OccupyWisdom/status/982782121524826112
Small, subprime auto lenders are shutting down as banks & private-equity firms cut off their funding. https://t.co/ofEY95w0pI
— Lisa Abramowicz (@lisaabramowicz1) April 6, 2018
Private equity firms, banks pull plug on some lenders ‘There’s going to be more capitulation,’ banker says
Growing numbers of small subprime auto lenders are closing or shutting down after loan losses and slim margins spur banks and private equity owners to cut off funding.
Summit Financial Corp., a Plantation, Florida-based subprime car finance company, filed for bankruptcy late last month after lenders including Bank of America Corp. said it had misreported losses from soured loans. And a creditor to Spring Tree Lending, an Atlanta-based subprime auto lender, filed to force the company into bankruptcy last week, after a separate group of investors accused the company of fraud. Private equity-backed Pelican Auto Finance, which specialized in “deep subprime” borrowers, finished winding down last month after seeing its profit margins shrink.
San Francisco’s Median House Price Hits a New High: $1.6 Million
Jeff Gundlach // 2018 is payback time. Stocks will go down this year