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 Subprime Crisis 2.0? Red Flags Fly As Alleged Fraud Triggers Billion-Dollar Auto-Lender Bankruptcy
 
 by Tyler Durden
 
 Thursday, Sep 18, 2025 - 08:25 AM
 
 Did a medium-sized canary just croak in the coalmine of consumer credit?
 
 While  the world and his pet rabbit was avidly glued to the screens, hanging  on every word from Fed Chair Powell, something happened in a name that  few have likely heard of that could have a much greater impact on  markets.
 
 After seeing its bonds rise week after week, seemingly amid confidence in the US consumer (especially at the lowest incomes)...
 
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 ...prices for the almost $2 billion of debt behind subprime auto-lender Tricolor Holdings suddenly collapsed yesterday, leaving creditors across the US scrambling to stake their claim on the company’s remaining assets and contain their losses...
 
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 As Bloomberg reports, the details behind the collapse of Tricolor remain uncertain,  with federal investigators looking into possible fraud and banks  exploring whether the same collateral was pledged to multiple lenders.
 
 
 In  Dallas, the regional bank Triumph Financial Inc. has dispatched teams  of employees to used-car lots, where they’re identifying and whisking  away to safe locations the vehicles they believe are the collateral to  their loans. This is part of what’s  fueling the frantic rush - the sense that many of the details behind the  collapse of Tricolor, a provider of high-interest car loans to  undocumented workers, remain murky even a week after its bankruptcy  filing.
 In midtown Manhattan, a boutique investment  firm that built a position in Tricolor’s asset-backed bonds, Clear  Haven Capital Management, has been calling other bondholders, urging  them to band together and fight to keep the big banks away from the  assets that belong to them.
 
 Those banks, including  JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Fifth Third Bancorp, have begun to  forensically examine their own collateral to try to ascertain the  magnitude of the losses.
 
 
 
 Prominent among them: Was there fraud, as federal investigators are now looking into, and how prevalent was it?
 
 
 “Everyone  is in the dark as to how serious these allegations of fraud are, so  bondholders and lenders are rushing to protect their interests,” said Boris Peresechensky, a portfolio manager at Orange Investment Advisors.Two  other big subprime auto lenders that declared bankruptcy in recent  years — American Car Center and US Auto Sales — ended up costing some  junior bondholders dearly, said Peresechensky.
 
 
 Signs are emerging that it may have been widespread. Banks are exploring whether the same collateral was pledged to multiple lenders.
 
 Bloomberg reports that people familiar with the probes say the suspected manipulation stretches back months, possibly longer.
 
 Earlier  this week, holders of Tricolor’s asset-backed bonds didn’t receive some  scheduled payments, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
 
 They  also didn’t get a remittance report - the regular statement detailing  cash collected from borrowers and how it’s distributed — the people  said.
 
 Tricolor opted to liquidate in bankruptcy rather  than attempt a reorganization amid concerns over litigation risk and  signs there weren’t enough assets to restructure, according to a person familiar with the decision.
 
 The company listed more than 25,000 creditors, vendors and other affected parties in its bankruptcy filing.
 
 The  bottom line is a major (subprime) auto-lender just hit the wall in epic  fashion (out of nowhere) as the Emperor's clothes narrative of the  so-called "strong consumer" (spending was solid in aggregate) were  suddenly exposed as more evidence of the K-shaped economy Americans are  living in (haves and have-nots) and the divergence is getting wider.
 
 If  collateral-backed subprime auto-lenders are collapsing, how long before  default rates on Buy-Now, Pay-Later entities start to soar?
 
 The Bear Traps Report's Larry McDonald  recently noted that BDCs and Private Credit entities are starting to  creak - with some sizable names trading well off recent highs. While the  driver for much of that pain appears to be AI data-center over-spend,  contagion from these archaic credit assets (from subprime auto to BNPL)  into the mainstream is not something anyone wants to experience again.
 
 Is Tricolor Holdings the June 2007 Bear Stearns Structured-Credit Fund of 2025?
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