Money Magazine Australia

When car loans are a rip-off

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If you’ve never heard of “flex” commission­s, you are among the vast majority of people, and it is hardly surprising. That’s because flex commission­s wouldn’t exist if consumers knew about them.

Most people know that car dealers sell on-the-spot financing. Cars are an emotional purchase often made outside normal bank hours. In the excitement of the new car moment and to assure the “great deal”, immediate finance approval leads some car buyers to suspend their normal judgement and take whatever is on offer.

Most people would expect the dealer to receive commission on the loan. What surprises is that the dealer can set a higher interest rate than the lender’s base rate, earning higher commission. That “flex” commission, sometimes up to 80% of the increased interest, is quite an incentive to the dealer. It can mean very high financing costs for the borrower.

Last year the regulator ASIC formally banned flex commission­s. Effective from November 2018, lenders, not car dealers, will have responsibi­lity for determinin­g the interest rate. The dealer cannot suggest a different rate that earns more commission­s but has limited capacity to discount it and receive lower commission­s.

The changes will protect car buyers from very high interest rates, determined opportunis­tically at point of sale. Of course, dealers will see their commission­s cut, potentiall­y meaning higher car prices but far more transparen­cy for the buyer.

Is it enough to protect consumers? No, even when flex commission­s disappear, buyers might still be offered an interest rate that is too high. There is only one way to protect yourself and that is to compare the loan offered with others available to you. How do interest rates, repayments and fees compare, rememberin­g “apples with apples”?

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 ??  ?? Canstar finance expert Steve Mickenbeck­er,
Canstar finance expert Steve Mickenbeck­er,

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