Tag: car title loan profits

23
Aug

Car Title Loan Business Idea: RallyRD

Very Cool Fractionalized Car Lending Platform

Hello!  

I’m always reverse engineering new lending platforms!  

In December of 2018, Rally RD came to my attention.

I immediately bought shares of this 1961 Jaguar XKE Convertible.  Rally invests in collectibles like cars, sneakers, art, wine, watches, comic books, sports memorabilia… Then, it sells fractionalized shares in the item to investors.  

You can exit your investment at any time.  You have the option of investing as little as $25 to $1000’s.  

It’s a very cool platform! 

ONE NEW IDEA WE CAME UP WITH?  

After “playing” with it for several months, we’ve launched a new title loan business offering fractionalized title loans to our investor network. [SORRY! We closed our last capital round.] 

However, our Newsletter and Blog are read by thousands of entrepreneurs in the lending space. I’m certain many of you will come up with unique, profitable ideas after exploring Rally RD!  

Join Rally with my link & make your 1st investment in winning cool stuff!
NOTE: This LINK is a referral link entitling you and me to prizes. If you prefer, just type Rally RD Dot Com into your favorite Browser. 

Check it out: RallyRD.  

And, don’t hesitate to reach out anytime to discuss “The Business of Lending to the Masses.”  
TrihouseConsulting
https://www.linkedin.com/in/jerryayles/ 
https://twitter.com/JerAyles    
https://AutomobilePawn.com
10
Jan

How to Start a Car Title Loan Business

LA’s billionaire king of subprime auto lending

Car title loan lenders get a bad rap from the majority of society because most people are unable to put themselves in their “brother’s shoes.”

Here is an example of a real-world car title loan lender who enables average folks who need a car in order to get to work, pick up their kids…

Setting the scene

Every weekday around 6 a.m. Don Hankey, 76, arrives by chauffeured car at his office near Hancock Park. Hankey started in the auto business nearly 50 years ago, when he took over his father’s car dealership at Vermont and Beverly. That business eventually grew into The Hankey Group, a collection of seven mostly car-related companies: Insurance, rentals, technology, but also real estate. The real moneymaker of the group, however, is Westlake Financial Services, a huge subprime auto lender that does business throughout the U.S., Mexico, India and the Philippines.

On a recent morning at 7 a.m., the company had already approved 286 deals. By the end of the day, Hankey said, he expected that number to hit 20,000. Interest rates for these loans can reach as high as 30% (versus the national average rate of about 4% on a 60-month loan). “We try not to say no,” said Hankey. “We just try to make it impossible to buy the deal,” either through high-interest rates or demanding more money down.

On accusations of predatory lending: 

“Let’s say you have somebody with bad credit, so they either have to pay 18% interest or not get a car at all. Are we better off just not giving them a car? I think they need a car. Maybe it provides a job for them that they wouldn’t otherwise have. There’s good and there’s bad to it, but I think that I think the good [out]weighs the bad.”

On the origins of the subprime auto lending boom:

“You know, people say they’re going to pay their house payment first. And then a funny thing happened in 2008, 2009 [during the mortgage meltdown] … Many people let their house go, but they needed that car, and they couldn’t go to work without the car. They left their house…and kept their car payments current.”

That means Hankey, and other lenders can make money two ways: From their borrowers paying back those high-interest loans, and by selling those loans off to Wall Street, where demand increased post-recession.

“People buy that credit. They were very concerned during the Great Recession that these things would default. But what happened is that almost all of them got paid in full, and you saw the defaults on real estate. People go out of their way to hold onto their car in a bad period of time.”

As long as people need cars to get to work, Hankey says, he’s not worried about a massive wave of defaults like what happened in the housing market a decade ago.  

Originally Posted here: “Subprime Auto Lending.”

29
Mar

Are Title Loan Franchises Profitable?

Title Loan Franchises Profitable!

Are car title loan businesses profitable? Is buying a title loan company franchise necessary?

Here’s your next installment of our Car Title Loan Business mini-course.

Car Title Loan non-franchise company profits: (See our actual financial metrics below.)

$50,000 in car title loans “on the street.”

Each “Title Loan” principal avg. = $1185.

Total car title loans outstanding = 42

Fees = $25/$100 loan principal. $12,500/month gross fee income.

So… the question you have to ask is “Can I achieve $100,000 “on the street” eventually? In my town? At this rate?

That’s $25,000 per month in gross income plus late fees, revenue generated from other services you offer such as tax returns, bill pay, money transfer, money orders…

Car title loan franchise profitable

Title Loan Business

Following our guidelines on our AutomobilePawn.com website at http://www.AutomobilePawn.com you can hit these numbers with 1.5 employees and run this location from anywhere via the Internet.

Overview of the Car Title Loan Industry

Known as title loans, pink slip loans, title pawn loans, car-title-loans, auto-title, automobile title loans, title loan business, motor vehicle equity lines of credit… Basically the borrower offers the title of their vehicle as collateral for a loan. The traditional car title loan is similar to a payday loan in that they are typically single-payment loans with one month terms. At the end of each term, the car title loan is renewed by paying the fees due. In many cases, the borrower will “pay-down” a portion of the principal due as well.

A title loan is a way for a consumer or small business owner to borrow against the equity in their motor vehicle.

Most title loan customers do not own real estate so their vehicle is their most valuable asset.

Typically these are small loans. The USA average is less than $1000.

Like payday loans, car title loans are marketed as small, quick and easy emergency loans.  The major differences are the car title loan is collateralized (Collateral: assets pledged by a borrower to secure a loan or other credit, and subject to seizure in the event of default) by a vehicle (car, boat, RV, motorcycle…) and, in many states, the maximum loan amount is set higher by statute.

Loan terms vary depending on state or provincial statute as well.  30 days is typical but terms do vary by geographic area.  Refer to the State Laws Sections at the end of this Manual for specific data.

The finance charge is simple interest.

Rarely are there fees, points, penalties, hidden charges, etc.  Rates are commonly in the range of 25% interest on the principal for a 30 day period.

Credit reports are not used to determine whether an auto title loan customer will qualify.  Generally the critical factors are:

  •  Value of the collateral. It must be 100% unencumbered. Or, you can use a portion of the loan principal to pay off any liens in order to “clear” the title. This is a hassle but many car title lenders will “jump through the hoops” when the collateral is highly      valued. Examples? Trucks, RV’s, boats, high-dollar sports cars…
  •  Ability of the auto title loan customer to make the payments.  Contrary to what the consumer protectionists’ claim, we do want our customer to successfully pay us back!

There are two auto title loan models we use:

  • Auto title loan: we take possession of the unencumbered title or “pink slip” to the vehicle.  The consumer continues to maintain possession and drive the car.
  • Auto pawn: we take possession of the vehicle and store it.

This Manual is appropriate for both approaches. The major differences are fees imposed on the borrower and the specific license issued by your state or province to carry out each activity.

Car Title Loan Metrics (Avg. for Trihouse Consulting & Clients)

Median Loan Principal: $1185

Median Car Value (Low Kelly Blue Book): $3285

Median Loan to Value Ratio: 32%

Median APR: 300%

Avg. Number Repos/100: 4.5

Avg. Number Rollovers: 8

Typical Costs for U.S. Borrower

  • Average “low book” value: $2800
  • Average loan principal: $1185
  • Principal and fees due in 30 days: $1481.25 ($296.25 fee + $1185 principal)
  • Average  loan fee: 25% per month
  • Average  total: fees paid (8 rollovers) $2370
  • Total paid in principal & fees (8 rollovers: $3555

NOTE: often additional DMV & Reg. fees. Depends on State/Province.

So… should you buy a car title loan franchise? We say no. Take the $25K to $45K franchise fee and loan it out instead in the form of car title loans. Depending on your State, these funds will put another $2000 to as much as $11,250+ on your top line income statement!

Jer@AutomobilePawn.com

Tactics & Strategies for Title Loan Lenders http://www.AutomobilePawn.com

702-208-6736 [10 AM – 4 PM PDT]

 

22
Dec

Are Car Title Loan Businesses Profitable?

Profits & ROI: Lending $$ on Car Titles

Title loan business profits.

Before you invest any more time in considering a car title loan business start-up, let me explain how much MONEY you can make!

Let’s begin with a real transaction. We have equity in California stores. We offer payday loans, car title lending, scrap gold buying and tax services.

In one of our California title loan locations, a new customer walked-in requesting a title loan on his truck. We determined the “low-book” value of his collateral was $15,000. We loaned $3000 at 9% per month ($270/month) for 36 months with zero pre-payment penalty. If this customer chooses to, he’ll pay us a total of $9720 in fees AND will still owe us $3000 in loan principal.

What’s the worse case? Our borrower doesn’t pay us back the $3000. We call our repo guy and he picks up the truck. He delivers it to the auction. The auction company cleans it up and sells it for us. We get a check from the auction for $12,500. We add on our repo fees, auction fees, late fees… and send our truck owner the balance. All we did is pick up the phone!

The point?
You really don’t need to read any further to grasp the profit potential in the title loan industry.

If you’re interested, I delve DEEPLY into PROFITS in our “Title Loan Manual” here: http://www.AutomobilePawn.com

Title Loan Business

Title Loan Business

Once you get rockin & rollin, it’s not a huge leap to make 100+ title loans via one store or website.
100 title loans averaging $3000/ea = $300,000 “on the street.”
$300,000 X 9%/month = $27,000/month in gross fee income!

As you can see, deduct for 1.5 employees, rent, phones, software… AND YOU”RE MAKING SERIOUS MONEY!

You will read a daily newspaper somewhere and stories like these will appear:

A single mom, Amy Poormom in Iowa, received a $350 auto title loan for 14 days, paid only the interest portion 8 times with no portion applied to the principal, in total paying $977.

An auto mechanic in Tyler, Texas paid $1211 in interest and fees over 11 months; only having reduced the principal balance by $15.

Burdened by medical expenses, Amy Poormom applied for and received a $500 auto title loan secured by her 1995 Ford Taurus.  This was a loan for 30 days and specified a loan fee of $30 per $100 borrowed.  Amy renewed (paid only the interest/fee of $150) for 12 months.  At this point Amy had paid a total of $1800 in interest/fees while still owing a balance of $500.

Of course, the “mean” car title loan company repossessed Amy’s car (which she needed for work) and sold it for $750 at an auction.  Now Amy can no longer get to work.  Amy lost her job.  Worry and stress put her in the hospital.  Now, the hospital is suing her for non-payment; she has no job so she has no insurance.

What is not mentioned or even considered is that Amy Poormom needed the initial title loan because no one in her family was willing to provide her with the $500 she needed for tires and brakes on the car.  The auto title loan company actually enabled her to gain another 12 months to get her life back on track.  It could be said that had the auto title loan company not come to her aid and provided some hope for Amy, the ultimate outcome would have come earlier.  Perhaps the family should have performed an intervention to help her with her crack habit?

Ok, if you’re reading this you may think we are getting carried away. But these are real-life events.

ENOUGH OF THIS!  If you’re so inclined, make some serious cash and use your profits to give back to your community any way you see fit. (Note that Warren Buffet owns MANY mobile home parks. He makes a LOT of money with them. He takes a LOT of heat because of the way they are operated. Warren gives $$$ back…)

Back to title loan business profits.

States and provinces having specific auto title loan statutes and fee structures typically prescribe 3% – 30% per month on the principal loaned; 25% being the average in the USA.  Thus, a $1500 loan for a 30 day time period could yield total interest payments of $45 to $375 with no portion applied to the principal.  Thus, if after 6 months, the consumer continues to “roll-over” this loan they will have paid as much as $2250 in fees/interest.  The balance due would remain $1500!

$500.00 borrowed for a 30 day term will typically cost $125 including miscellaneous fees.  The actual range is roughly $75 to $190 depending on the state/province and the exact circumstances of the borrower.

After you enter the title loan business, you’ll be pleasantly surprised by the number of customers who will have a late model Lexus or Mercedes.  It’s amazing how many people receive settlements and use the proceeds to purchase a new luxury car.  Later they experience cash-flow problems and need your help.  And they have the car titles!

Even in a state like Florida where the title loan statutes prescribe an interest rate of 30% per annum, it’s a simple matter to put $250,000 “on the street” in auto title loans.  This would yield a gross of $75,000/year versus a CD earning $15,000. By the way, Florida title lenders are very creative. They add on road service fees, application fees, up-front loan matching fees… achieving SUBSTANTIAL ROI’s.

Title loan clients may not be totally bereft, but they are in trouble and are willing to borrow money at interest rates dwarfing those of a conventional bank loan; ranging from 17 percent a month (204 percent APR) on $500 or less to 10%, 20%, 30%  percent a month  on more than $5,000.

“Your job is your credit” rings very true in our industry.  We have a Texas title loan operator having 300 people bringing him $40 per week.  That’s $12,000 per week!  If the car breaks down, he has it fixed and adds it to their loan.

A great number of auto title loan lenders add on several fees to improve their ROI’s and provide incentives to their clients to pay on time.  These include but are not limited to:

* A $15 fee if a collection letter must be mailed to the consumer
* A $25 returned check fee Late fees (5% is typical)
* Should a collector be sent to their door, a $50 to $100 fee is imposed
* Deficiency fees are collected should a sale of the vehicle yields less than the amount owed.

Alright. If you found this interesting, PLEASE TELL ME: Jer@AutomobilePawn.com

And, if you’re ready to jump into the Title Loan Industry,
GO HERE and invest in our 300+ page “How to Start a Title Loan Business Manual.”

10
Aug

Start a Title Loan Business?

Want to start start a car title loan business?

This simple approach works! You want to learn how to start a title loan business? We offer all the information you need in our “How to Start a Car Title Loan Business Manual.”

Start Car Title Loan Business

Start a Title Loan Biz

One easy method we discuss? Place an ad on Craigslist for an employee. Get applications and then meet the candidates at Starbucks. It’s common for this tactic to result in a 60 minute meeting with an experienced car title loan employee who will “spill their guts” and reveal every strategy your future car title loan competitor is using to profit lending $$ on car titles.

You may even hire one of these candidates for your own new car title loan business! Or, find an experienced partner! It’s happened to us many times over the 15+ years we’ve been in the car title loan and payday loan industry.

Now, I’m not suggesting you take advantage of these applicants. Narrow down the candidates to those with real car title loan experience. Tell them you’re researching the title loan space and have not yet decided to start.

At the end of the meeting, offer to pay them for their time. If you learned a lot about the car title loan space, it’s fair to give them a check for $50 – $100 for their time and information. This is your call! It’s about integrity!! I am HAPPY to pay for good information. I think of it as an investment. And paying a great car title loan resource $100 for 60 minutes of their time makes a GREAT deal of sense to me! And again, if you “pull the trigger” and start a car title loan business, this applicant could play a key role in your success!

Here’s a very basic sample script for a “Title Loan Employee Wanted:”

  • Title Loan Rep 

    compensation: will discuss
    employment type: full-time

    Qualifications:Bilingual must peak English/ Spanish
    Have a High School Diploma or GED
    At least 1 year experience in Title Loan Industry
    Reliable transportation
    Detail oriented and have the ability to multi-task
    Employment stability
    Please email your resume!!!

Meanwhile, here’s a chapter-by-chapter description of our 300+ page Manual on “How to Start or Improve a Car Title Loan Business” and make money by lending money on titles to automobiles.

21
Jul

Title Loan Profits

Car Title Loan Profits

How profitable is a title loan business? What can a car title loan business owner expect to make by lending borrowers money in return for the title to their car?

Triple digit annual percentage rates (APR) are typical for our industry. A recent Missouri State Auditor’s Report revealed the average to be 200% to nearly 400%. Illinois approached 300%. Wisconsin averages 300%.

Here’s a link to The California Department of Business Oversight Report. It reveals 53% of title loans earned 70% – 99% APR’s and business increased 17% year over year!

How to Start Title Loan Biz

Click to Buy

So… how profitable is a title loan business?

What’s this mean to a car title loan company? You loan $1000 and earn $99/month in interest. Your borrower pays you nearly $600 in interest over 6 months. At the end of 6 months, your borrower still owes you the $1000 principal. Not bad!

In many states, Texas for example, typical fees on a $500 loan are 25% per month; $125 month interest only. Note that these are typical rates for auto title loan companies – sometimes referred to as “pink slip loans” having stores in states/provinces with fee caps. When operating in locales not having prescribed statutes you will experience even higher APR’s.

Additionally, it’s not uncommon for auto title loan companies to minimize their APR calculations by failing to compute them properly. This is not necessarily intentional. Many operators simply do not know how to calculate an APR correctly. This is not recommended. It can lead to serious problems, particularly after you become extremely successful. You will become a target  (More on this in our How to Start a Car Title Loan Manual).

How to start a car title loan business

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