A major subprime auto lender just went belly up. It won’t be like subprime mortgage lenders sparking the Great Recession

Tricolor, a major subprime auto lender specializing in buyers without social security numbers or credit histories, is going out of business.

The company filed for bankruptcy on Wednesday. Most companies that file for bankruptcy intend to stay in business. But Tricolor does not – it plans to liquidate. Tricolor has not been available for comment.

Tricolor’s failure is bad news for buyers who depend on such lenders, often undocumented immigrants – a particular focus of the Texas-based company. It’s also not great for the major banks invested in Tricolor’s debt backed by its loans.

But Tricolor’s problems aren’t likely to upend the broader financial services industry the way the subprime mortgage lenders did in 2008, nearly bringing about a new Depression. Those loans gave birth to what became known as “toxic assets,” forcing the federal government to pour billions into each of the nation’s major banks to stop a complete seizure and collapse of the US economy.

Subprime auto loans, even questionable ones like the low documentation loans Tricolor offered, are a very different animal than the subprime mortgage loans of the early years of this century.

“It’s not something to worry about in terms of a market collapse,” Pamela Foohey, a law professor at the University of Georgia and an expert in both auto finance and bankruptcies, told CNN Thursday. “I think it’s troubling for people that they take out subprime loans and then potentially have their cars repossessed if they can’t afford the payments.”

What subprime loans are, and are not

“Subprime,” whether it be for mortgages or car loans, refers to borrowers with weak credit scores. However, there are many important differences between subprime mortgage loans and subprime auto loans, Foohey said.

First, the entire auto loan market is only a fraction of the size of the home mortgage market – one-eighth the size, according to the Federal Reserve.

And auto loans are not as leveraged, Foohey said, meaning they’re not bundled into bonds and sold to other investors as often as mortgages were just before the housing market collapse of 2008.

But more importantly, unlike home prices in 2007 and 2008, car values are holding steady or rising. And cars are a depreciating asset.

That means auto lenders, or those buying the bonds backed by the loans, aren’t expecting cars to increase in value over the life of the loan. Mortgage lenders, and those buying mortgage-backed securities, were counting on home prices in the aughts to keep rising to bail them out of any bad loans.

A Tricolor dealership in Houston, Texas, US, on Thursday, Sept. 11, 2025. Tricolor Holdings, a used car seller and subprime lender that focuses on undocumented immigrants in the US Southwest, filed to liquidate in bankruptcy.

A Tricolor dealership in Houston, Texas, US, on Thursday, Sept. 11, 2025. Tricolor Holdings, a used car seller and subprime lender that focuses on undocumented immigrants in the US Southwest, filed to liquidate in bankruptcy. Mark Felix/Bloomberg/Getty Images

“The biggest difference is the expectations of the lenders of what will happen with the assets – the cars – when the buyers default,” said Foohey. “In many ways, subprime auto lenders actually expect borrowers will default and they’ll get the cars back pretty quickly at some point and then resell it.”

For homeowners who miss payments, they can fight foreclosure and stay in their homes for an extended period of time. Even when a lender takes possession, reselling the home at a price high enough to cover the cost can be difficult and time consuming.

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