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According to the latest State of the Automotive Finance Market report, a record 55.5% of all used vehicles were financed in Q2 2015, compared to 53.8% the previous year. The percentage of new vehicles financed also reached a high point of 85.8% compared with 85% a year earlier. As auto lending continues its growth trend, lenders can design profitable strategies by using advanced analytics to target the right customers with the right offer at the right time. >>The Market Intelligence Brief: Access the latest consumer credit trends

Commerce: A conversation between merchants and consumers Last week I joined Sherri Haymond of MasterCard and Bharathi Ramavarjula of Facebook on a panel moderated by Paul Moreton, for a CapitalOne summit on Payments. When asked what was more important for the future of commerce – Sherri spoke of how security and trust is key, and I talked about how messaging has intersected with payments, (and in Wechat’s case) now intersecting with lending – with Bharathi eloquently summing it up as – “Facebook sees Commerce as a conversation”. If Commerce is a conversation between a merchant and a consumer (however loosely defined those terms have now come to be), then it has become contorted and clustered around payments and point of sale. Till not too long ago, there also existed a high barrier for entry to become a merchant, to accept payments, to promote and sell online, and to find cheap capital for growth. All these things are different now – and unsurprisingly, little of this progress can be attributed to banks or other current payment stakeholders. For example: I didn’t know I could be a merchant till Square showed me how easy it is to accept credit cards, and setup a small business. I didn’t know that I could become a driver in my spare time – till Uber showed me how easy it is to become one. I didn’t know that I could become a landlord till AirBnB showed me how easy it is to find people to rent it to. I know I am oversimplifying. These three and others like them chose to use technology and smartphones to exponentially scale the size of existing two-sided markets as well as create new ones. When another billion people on the planet stand to be connected over the next five years – entirely via cheap smartphones – it is hard to view commerce as a zero sum opportunity. Being wired for commerce may come to mean something entirely different for those billion, and messaging apps and social networks will replace point of sale for discovery, acquisition and engagement. This is why I believe changes in payments today are largely incremental and localized to the developed world. The platform driven efforts – such as tokenization – do go beyond any specific modality (card, mobile, connected things) to further the notion and benefit of trust entirely within the network. But that is as far as it goes. Issuers and networks may have little role to play in discovery, consumer loyalty and now more so than ever – identity. Case in point: Through Relay, Stripe enables a retailer to push a button and start selling through new channels while taking comfort in that his pricing and inventory will remain real-time. Through Messenger and Shopping – Facebook will encapsulate product discovery, guide the intent to purchase, host the informed pre-purchase debate and even payment – flattening it and never letting it out of sight. It is no accident that each of the four horsemen of the Internet has heavily invested in voice assistants – (Apple/Siri, Google/Now, Facebook/M, Amazon/Echo, Microsoft/Cortana) – especially as we confront old habits in interaction design that are failing on mobile, to continue to shorten the distance between intent and action through things like 3D Touch, the Amazon Dash button, and intelligent agents. Everything that is interesting in commerce: product discovery, search, interface and interaction design are all being done – with the sole exception of Amazon – by an entity that is neither a retailer nor a bank. Conversational commerce does not end with payments being swallowed up by messaging apps. It is a pre-requisite, but hardly not even a way point in that journey. Originally posted on: Droplabs.co

Driver of success: Mitigate auto lending risk A culture of learning is a key driver of success. Does your risk culture continue to adapt? There are many issues within auto lending that are unique to other financial services ecosystems: the direct versus indirect relationship, insights of the asset influencing the risk insights, new versus used vehicle transactions influencing risk and terms, and more. However, there is one universal standard common to all financial services cultures — change.. Change is constant, and an institution’s marketing and risk organizations need to be constantly learning to stay abreast of dealer, consumer, competitor and regulatory issues. No one has said it better than Jack Welch: “An organization’s ability to learn, and translate that learning into action rapidly, is the ultimate competitive advantage.” This statement was quickly followed by a command: “Change before you have to.” So the challenge for the portfolio manager is to ensure there are the system features, data sources, management reporting structures, data access features, analytic skills, broad management team skill sets, and employee feedback and incentive plans to drive the organization to a constant state of renewal. The challenge for many smaller and midsize lenders is to determine what systems and skills need to be in-house and what tasks are better left for a third party to handle. For consumer-level data, vehicle history and valuation data, and fraud alert flags, it seems reasonable to leverage solutions from established third parties: credit reporting agencies. After that, the solutions to the many other needs may be more specific to the lender legacy skill set and other support relationships: Are there strong in-house data-management and analytic skills? There is a significant difference between management information and data analysis driving policy and portfolio performance forecasts. Does the internal team have both? Is the current operating platform(s) feature-rich and able to be managed and enhanced by internal resources within tight time frames? Is the management team broadly experienced and constantly updating best-practice insights? Is the in-house team frequently engaged with the regulatory community to stay abreast of new mandates and initiatives? There is a solution. Experian® offers the data, software, solutions, management information, analytic solutions and consulting services to tie everything together for a lender-specific best configuration. We look forward to hearing from you to discuss how we can help.
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