Bought a used car 3/21. They got us a loan through a credit union, no down payment, full price of car plus taxes and fees. 3/28 the credit union sends a letter that I received today, on 4/4 in the mail, saying that they are "unable to approve your application as submitted for the following reasons: Value or type of collateral not sufficient." We have not had any contact from the car dealer regarding this. We have tried to return the car, as the engine light came on when we drove out of the lot. They fixed it, but the engine light has turned on again for the same reason. Through some digging, we found out that the transmission is bad, and needs to be replaced with a new one. The scanner has revealed several codes. This puts the value of the car as totalled, in reality. They will not take the car back, and insist on flushing the transmission fluid four times to solve the issue. They're trying to rush us to do this on Monday morning. We don't want this car, it was sold to us with the condition already present. There was no engine light when we test drove it. Now the credit union has a counter offer for less money which is conditional based on the actual vehicle used as collateral which may be impacted by such variables as the year and/or value or an extended term. If this offer is acceptable to you, please notify….. What can we do? Can we take the car back now, that this has happened with the loan?
Credit Union letter "value or type of collateral not sufficient"
byu/Extreme_Bear_721 inpersonalfinance
Posted by Extreme_Bear_721
8 Comments
used cars are as is and it’s on the buyer to inspect it before buying
If you want to return it, please don’t sign anything on the counter terms from the bank.
In other words, don’t accept the new terms.
If the deal was not funded by the bank, the vehicle is not yours. So you should return it.
Just call the Credit Union on Monday and tell them you no longer need the loan. Then take the car back to the dealership. No loan, no car. Do not let the dealership coerce you into signing anything else
None of the “car has a check engine light/bad transmission/I don’t want it” is relevant. Used cars are sold as-is. Next time have it inspected.
The only discussion to have with the dealer is regarding the funding of the loan. Hopefully they confirm that there is a lack of financing without changing the loan terms. This gives you the opportunity to walk-away.
But that’s it.
The CU declining to fund your loan is probably a good thing in this case considering the car sounds like it might be beyond economical repair.
Decline the new terms from the bank, and tell the dealer your financing fell through (if they’re somehow not already aware). They still own it…I highly doubt they want to give you a free car, or waste time chasing you for payment, and car sales contracts are often contingent on financing being approved (though usually this goes the other way, where the dealer is demanding return due to lack of approval as opposed to the buyer trying to use such as a reason to return it).
The dealer would need to find another bank or credit loan that will issue a loan for the exact same terms that are in the contract you signed. If they can, you’re stuck with the car. If they can’t then they have two options left. They can hold the loan themselves, which almost never happens, or take the car back. Do not sign anything else, period.
A collateral rejection letter arriving 13 days after the purchase with no dealer contact is a dealer-financed loan problem not a credit union problem. The dealer owns this issue. Have you tried returning the car to the dealer in person and documenting that attempt?
side note if you are getting this letter… you are paying tooooo much for the car…they will tupicallly finance 110% or 120% depending on credit
fix the deal… or find a new car