Rome News-Tribune

In more covid fallout, used car prices way up, and repo man is back

- By Don Lee

Healthcare worker Cleveland Wishop landed at BaltimoreW­ashington Internatio­nal Airport last fall expecting to retrieve his car from long-term parking and drive home.

It never crossed Wishop’s mind that he had fallen into one of the economic traps stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic.

His blue Camaro had vanished. The dealer who sold him the 2010 car a year earlier seized it after Wishop fell just 19 days behind in making his August payment.

“I was pissed, extremely,” Wishop said.

In times past, auto dealers and lenders were slower to retake cars when borrowers fell behind. Finding and repossessi­ng vehicles was often difficult, occasional­ly even risky. And recouping costs on seized vehicles was a losing game. But the pandemic changed that. Global supply chain snarls continue to cause chronic shortages in many vital products, including the computer chips at the heart of modern cars.

And that’s led to an unpreceden­ted rise in used-car prices as production of new vehicles remains constraine­d.

Based on government surveys, prices for used cars and trucks rose 43% in June from August 2020, when they first started to jump. For new vehicles, prices rose 17% over the same period.

This pandemic-related surge in the demand for used cars and trucks has turned the repo game on its head.

Now a dealer who moves fast to repossess a vehicle can expect to resell it quickly, sometimes at a far higher price.

And thanks to the prevalence of tracking technology, finding vehicles is fairly simple.

Auto repos had been down during earlier phases of the pandemic as lenders gave more breaks to borrowers.

Although statistics for this year aren’t yet available, title firms, government regulators and many people involved in auto collection and auctions say that repossessi­ons are rising notably, particular­ly for used cars.

“There was a period for a lot of creditors, they were deferring earlier in COVID,” said Colin Welsh, a Woodland Hills attorney who works with borrowers and has been fielding many more repo calls. “That has waned, and now they’re seizing the moment.”

Mark Lacek, a Florida repo man who’s recovered more than 10,000 vehicles since the 1970s, predicts the trend will only grow.

“I expect to be super, super busy,” he said, adding that technology has streamline­d assigning and finding repo vehicles. Like beachcombe­rs with metal detectors, Lacek said, a small army of people with license-plate-reading cameras mounted on their cars cruise the streets, waiting for a ping to alert them when they pass a vehicle in the repo database.

In the case of Wishop’s Camaro, Caspian Auto Motors of Stafford, Va., resold the car within two weeks and is now suing Wishop, of Petersburg, Va., to pay off the balance due on the four-year, high-interest loan.

Wishop, while acknowledg­ing his checkered credit history, says he is pursuing his own legal action against the dealer.

“They got paid twice for the same car,” he said. “That was their aim. That’s their game.”

Caspian managers didn’t return calls.

Car prices have soared so high that Robert W. Murphy, a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., attorney who represents borrowers, said he even had two clients get paid several thousand dollars each after their cars were repossesse­d and sold at an auction.

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