Europe’s car-financing businesses are trading in their cheap bonds for more expensive debt -- which means higher car loan rates for customers.
BMW, Mercedes-Benz and others sold 8.45 billion euros ($9 billion) in bonds in European markets last month, marking the biggest month for auto debt issuance in six years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
They are paying dramatically higher rates for debt, and analysts say it will trickle down to consumers, who will face more costly vehicle financing.
“Higher bond yields for auto companies means the cost of car leasing will go up,” said Antoine Lesne, head of ETF strategy and research at State Street Global Advisors.
That means “more pain for the consumer,” he said.
Debt is the lifeblood of the financing arms of Europe’s biggest automakers, which tap public bond markets and other sources of cash to offer consumer financing. To be sure, not all of the bond proceeds are used for in-house lending and automakers also use debt to finance general operations.
Even so, some analysts say that the rates are an early indication of where consumer financing costs are headed.