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Monday, January 16, 2012

FandI paperwork at 'ridiculous' levels, Group 1's Hesterberg says

Jim Henry
Automotive News -- January 11, 2012 - 10:46 am ET
Hesterberg: “The recent financial reform legislation the Dodd-Frank Act has created additional work and expense for dealers."

Photo credit: PHILIP NUSSEL

State and federal regulations that mandate extra paperwork on F&I transactions have reached "ridiculous" proportions, said Earl Hesterberg, CEO of the Group 1 Automotive dealership group.

For instance, because of tougher rules for so-called "adverse action" notices that took effect in 2011, he said, Group 1 is sending out more than 9,000 letters per month.

Customers who applied for credit and were turned down, or who had a "stipulation" added to their contract other than the terms originally requested, are entitled to an adverse-action notice. Examples of stipulations could be if a co-signer were required, or a bigger down payment.

The kicker is that the lenders on those same transactions have to send out letters as well, Hesterberg told the Automotive News World Congress today.

"Our company alone is sending out over 9,000 of these letters per month. The absurd fact is that the lenders are required to send out the same letter," Hesterberg said. Group 1 was the fourth-largest U.S. dealership group by new-vehicle unit sales in 2010, according to the Automotive News ranking of the top 125 dealership groups.

Starting July 21, 2011, under Federal Trade Commission rules, if the customer's credit score was used in the adverse decision, the adverse action notice must provide a credit score disclosure with specific details, including which credit bureau was used and the high and low range of scores.

"So what happens is a customer who receives a stipulation on a loan application, or is rejected, gets two letters reminding them of their credit quality. Good for the post office, bad for us from an expense and customer satisfaction perspective," Hesterberg said.

Texas paperwork

Hesterberg said state governments add to the paperwork burden, too.

"Did you know that when a husband and wife buy a car in Texas (with a trade), they are required to sign up to 56 times and 9 initials?" Hesterberg said.

He said requirements are similar in several other states. He said, "It is ridiculous what we are putting our clients through to purchase their vehicles!"

You can reach Jim Henry at autonews@crain.com. Readers are solely responsible for the content of the comments they post here. Comments are subject to the site's terms and conditions of use and do not necessarily reflect the opinion or approval of Automotive News. Readers whose comments violate the terms of use may have their comments removed or all of their content blocked from viewing by other users without notification.

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