Subprime Lender Primalend Enters Bankruptcy After Bond Default
Posted2 months agoActive2 months ago
bloomberg.comOtherstory
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BankruptcySubprime LendingFinancial Crisis
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Bankruptcy
Subprime Lending
Financial Crisis
Subprime lender PrimaLend has entered bankruptcy after defaulting on its bonds, sparking discussion on the implications of subprime lending practices and potential systemic risks.
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- 01Story posted
Oct 22, 2025 at 8:21 AM EDT
2 months ago
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Oct 22, 2025 at 8:25 AM EDT
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Oct 22, 2025 at 9:35 PM EDT
2 months ago
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ID: 45667949Type: storyLast synced: 11/20/2025, 12:44:40 PM
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(In seriousness, this is just a lender to car dealers.)
So I'd put this on the Candidate Apocalypse Etiologies List somewhere below the Trump tariffs, the Mutual Defense Treaty, TSMC, the Ukraine war, OpenAI, Gaza, the ASS buying drones, and Elon Musk's mental health.
care to elaborate on that one for me a little more?
are we even doing phrasing anymore?
Anyway I wonder if maybe it was a similar situation in other countries. Seems like car finance companies were set up for failure in a rising interest rate environment, consumers felt it and responded by buying cars on debt.
It seems like a similar thing happened a few years earlier with Silicon Valley Bank except theirs was bonds. I guess the lesson is; don't loan money out at a fixed rate while the currency is being debased into oblivion.
The other lesson is that wisdom of the crowds is real. I will never be able to understand how it's possible that pea-brained consumers sometimes seem to have a sixth sense about complex financial macroeconomics. Kind of what happened with Bitcoin as well. Stupid people with incredible gut instinct.
Risky things are expected to blow up, especially if there is a bubble.
[1] Apologies to Ned Beauman https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/709614/venomous-lum...
Wonder what the spillover effects will be of the auto lenders collapsing. With how much we love to repackage debt to earn a few bucks, there could be a ton of financial instruments intertwined with defaulted auto loans.
On the plus side, if everyone has their vehicle repossessed, maybe it will encourage more public transit and bike lanes.
Does this suggest the economy is failing to support the more fragile segment of our market -- those with poor credit who e.g. PrimaLend would loan money to?