
With auto lending easier to come by these days, bank regulators and analysts are keeping their eyes open for potential signs of trouble.

With auto lending easier to come by these days, bank regulators and analysts are keeping their eyes open for potential signs of trouble.

Business is booming on the lot, with the industry on pace to move some 16 million vehicles out onto the highway by the end of 2014. However, some Wall Street insiders are growing bearish with this bull market, blaming easy credit for the surge in demand.

A combination of income tax refunds issued in January and February with accessible financing have boosted used-car prices overall in the first two months of 2014.

The Great Recession has given us so much since it began five years ago with the fall of Lehman Brothers and Washington Mutual, from underwater mortgages and high unemployment, to bailouts of the financial and automotive manufacturing sectors and credit freezes.
Regarding the last item, a byproduct from said freeze will flood automakers with the potential to retain and steal customers when more and more leases draw to completion in the next year.
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