Business Tricolor files for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy - Used car business catering to illegals implodes and leaves a huge mess. Raise your hand if you're surprised.

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Link to Ace / Archive

Tricolor Auto Group, the nation’s seventh largest used car dealer (and 3rd biggest in Texas and California), just filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy – e.g. liquidation. Its target customer had been illegal aliens, and with President Trump deciding to start enforcing the nation’s immigration laws, there has suddenly been a major “market correction” in that market segment. Not only has the customer base largely evaporated, but so have loan repayments, which Tricolor also serviced.

The “tri colors” that the name references are the colors of the Mexican flag – red, white, and green.

While the sudden loss of customers and loan repayments was the catalyst that caused the final collapse of Tricolor, its failure has revealed so much more, including securities fraud, Wall Street ESG gimmickry, race-based federal programs, etc.

Tricolor has securitized more than $2 billion of its very high risk auto loans over the past seven years. The most recent issuance was in June of this year, with JP Morgan Chase and other money center banks peddling more than $200 million of “social bonds” to credulous investors. These securities are certified as “social bonds” by the US Treasury’s CDFI (“Community Development Financial Institution”) program because Tricolor focuses on selling its cars and financial services to underserved communities, specifically Spanish-speaking non-citizens. Tricolor’s CEO, Daniel Chu, was quoted by Barron’s in 2022 as stating, “No one else is providing meaningful dollar credit to an illegal immigrant.”

As documented in this recent Barron’s article (“Tricolor Files for Bankruptcy, The Auto Lender Was Once an ESG Favorite,”) “Financial institutions until recently touted their social bond purchases as part of their commitment to ESG—or environmental, social and governance—principles. BlackRock took a $90 million stake in Tricolor in 2021 as part of its Impact Opportunities Fund focusing on businesses and projects owned, led by, or serving members of minority groups.” Of course BlackRock was involved.

You may recall that a major contributor to the financial crash of 2008 was Wall Street wizards packaging up a bunch of sub-prime mortgages, securitizing them, and then selling those “mortgage backed securities” to investors as something other than perfumed garbage. That is effectively what Tricolor has been doing with its auto loans, with the help of Wall Street.

In a Tricolor press release from March of this year titled “Tricolor Closes $328 Million Securitization to Advance Financial Inclusion at Scale in Underserved Communities,” CEO Chu stated, ”By providing deserving people with access to reliable, affordable transportation, Tricolor, which operates across six states and ranks as the third largest used auto retailer in Texas and California, helps move them into the financial mainstream and reverse systemic financial inequities in America. Like the other securities issuance I referenced, JP Morgan Chase also promoted these odious securities, along with Barclay’s and Fifth Third Bank.

Per Car Dealership Guy, Tricolor’s bonds have collapsed to a value of 12 cents on the dollar, virtually wiping out the investors who bought those bonds. But as bad as this all sounds so far, it’s actually worse. There was massive fraud by Tricolor, which is causing losses to all parties who did business with it.

The banks who were packaging Tricolor’s securities also had lines of credit extended to Tricolor. There was a recent regulatory filing by Fifth Third Bank revealing that it was booking a $200 million impairment (loss) for fraud involving one of its customers. In this filing, Fifth Third disclosed that there was “recently discovered alleged external fraudulent activity at a commercial borrower,” and that it “is working with the appropriate law enforcement authorities in connection with this matter.” Barron’s confirmed that this commercial borrower was Tricolor. JP Morgan Chase also has about $200 million in loans outstanding to Tricolor, so it too will almost certainly be booking a massive impairment charge for this unrecoverable debt.

Some of the news reports about the Tricolor fraud state that collateral was “double pledged,” meaning that unbeknownst to the banks lending money to Tricolor, the collateral they thought was backing up their loans was also pledged to other banks.

Tricolor was also the servicer of its “buy here – pay here” loan portfolio, remitting collected payments to the banks who securitized their loans. From my experience dealing with fraud in this arena, it is quite likely that there was some level of kiting / ponzi scheme at work, and a constant inflow of new debt was necessary to keep servicing old debt that was not supported by actual assets.

Working in Tricolor’s favor to perpetuate the fraud was the aura of woke virtuosity that kept the money flowing in, which also helped shield Tricolor from appropriate due diligence by those same woke banks throwing money at it.

Working against Tricolor was President Trump’s immigration enforcement. The Department of Homeland Security issued this press release earlier this week: “Over 2 million Illegal Aliens Out of the United States in Less than 250 days.”

This mass exodus of illegal aliens has obviously resulted in a collapse in Tricolor vehicle sales, but much of the existing customer base has now either been deported, or chose to self-deport. Their loans will obviously not be repaid. As for the cars being driven by illegal aliens who have left the country, Tricolor’s liquidators will see a huge loss on those vehicles that were surrendered. But the loss will be even worse on the cars that were simply abandoned to be stolen and stripped…or taken across the border.

Blackrock, JP Morgan Chase, and all the other titans of Wall Street who bought into the hype about ESG investing deserve the loss they are going to take.

But for American citizens seeking affordable used cars, there is some good news. Supply is about to improve in relation to demand.

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But wait, there's more! From Peter Grant at Bayou Renaissance Man (Link / Archive)
A new wrinkle has been added to the fiscal mess Tricolor has left behind. According to a friend who works with this sort of fraud, many of Tricolor's illegal alien customers - and similar customers at other sales companies and/or lending institutions - bought their vehicles relatively recently, because they could see that Trump was going to make America less than welcoming for their ilk. They've now taken their vehicles across the border to Mexico and points south, still owing pots of money on them, and - of course - they're no longer paying the monthly note. It looks as if multiple billions of dollars in auto loans are suddenly non-performing.

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Stop, stop, my penis can only get so erect! But this does raise the prospect of more financial woes, a la the subprime mortgages from around 20 years ago. Keep your eyes open.
 
This is good news. I wasn’t aware of them but it shows that it’s working.
 
Lol wtf are these prices I looked at the site and there is a fucking 5 year old civic with 60k miles for 30 grand you can get a brand new civic for that much are Mexicans this retarded?
 
Lol wtf are these prices I looked at the site and there is a fucking 5 year old civic with 60k miles for 30 grand you can get a brand new civic for that much are Mexicans this retarded?
Assuming that wasn't a death-rattle price-increase that happened recently, I imagine that's the "we also bankroll the loans" upcharge, which says a lot about the stability of those loans.

Also the untaxed income difference is real, so there's a decent chance they would take that upcharge since it's not like unc sam is getting their pound of flesh anyway.
 
I've done some quick research on this thing and it looked like the prime rib of cartel money laundering, i wonder how many more of those companies exist that we don't know of because we don't speak spanish.

Who knows what might happen if the Cartel's logistical supply is severely curtailed alongside their failing investments into the white collar economy to serve the millions of their thralls who are now being purged?, i don't expect the bosses who now have to find the 10.000$ a month to 175 thousand cartel gunmen to sit on their asses.
 
They have several locations in Texas. Five in Houston in all shitty, non-white neighborhoods and along the freeway. Like businesses of its ilk they'll almost never build something new, always moving in. Most of them occupy the corpse of other car dealerships. Austin has two.
 
By the way, in case people here aren't aware? This isn't Chapter 11, where a company can return after consolidation and reorganization.

Chapter 7 is 'you're fucking dead', and at that point it's just trying to extract whatever can be collected from your assets, down to the paperclips.

The fallout from those high-risk auto loans converted into securities is going to be very interesting, though. Any bank holding those might as well be holding rolls of toilet paper (actually, the toilet paper would be more useful). The sad part is that it might put a heck of a dent in lending for vehicles, regardless of your citizenship or lack thereof. Time to save those pennies, kids.
 
Never heard of them.

It's pottery however, that the first I did hear of them was their screams as they imploded from the fallout of immigration enforcement.

By the way, in case people here aren't aware? This isn't Chapter 11, where a company can return after consolidation and reorganization.

Chapter 7 is 'you're fucking dead',
Yep.

The degree to which they crashed without illegals is evident in the fact it went straight to Chapter 7 (Say hello to the carbonite, scum) without even a performative attempt at Chapter 11 (Tell Jabba I'll have his money next week).
 
This is the second car financier to go bankrupt this year. There is more to this than just giving cars to foreigners; these companies are in trouble, delinquencies are up and this is across the entire consumer board (auto, home mortgage, credit card, personal loans) regardless of financier or bank.
 
So is this not an arrestable offense or?
Unfortunately no, there's almost no regulation when it comes to extending credit to illegal immigrants. Car loans, credit cards, personal loans, even mortgages.

In fact until March was completely possible for them to buy a house using the FHA program. Now it has changed to require proof of permanent residency.
 
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