Hedged.Biz

  • Disclaimer
  • About Us
  • Articles
  • Home
  • Articles
  • Singapore Car Loans. Imprudent Banking Practices
March 10, 2026

Singapore Car Loans. Imprudent Banking Practices

Singapore Car Loans. Imprudent Banking Practices

by Burnham Banks / Tuesday, 05 March 2013 | 12:06 am / Published in Articles
image_pdfimage_print

Until a week ago it was possible to buy a car in Singapore with a 10% down payment and a 10 year loan. Cars are acutely expensive a shortage of land (Singapore is a tiny island at the foot of Malaysia) has necessitated the rationing of cars through a quota system. The rationing requires car buyers to first buy a 10 year right to operate a car called a certificate of entitlement or COE. COEs are auctioned monthly with supply based on the number of cars being de-registered that month plus an acceptable growth rate. This idiosyncratic system has led to wild swings in COE prices, mostly to the upside, resulting in Singapore having the most expensive cars in the world. As an example, an Audi A6 in Singapore would cost the same as a Ferrari 458 Italia in London.

 

Not many people would be able to afford cars in Singapore were it not for the easy credit provided by banks. Which brings us to a rather simple question: why would anyone extend a loan, secured against a depreciating asset which almost guarantees that loan-to-values would rise from 90% at purchase to 105% overnight and to 120% in a year? Banks have to assume that car and COE prices would rise continually to defend their lending practices.

A week ago, the government stepped in to legislate that car buyers would have to put up 50% of the cost in cash and that loans should not exceed 5 years. At last someone was thinking rationally. One can only wonder who invented the 10 year car loan with 10% downpayment, for surely it is simply irresponsible lending behavior. It is an example of why regulators are necessary and why perhaps it is time to reconsider the limited liability concept, for who in his right mind would lend his own money this carelessly?

Ten Seconds Into The Future

“Hello. I’m Burnham Banks and I studied economics in the late 80s and early 90s. I’m still studying economics today and am still no wiser. This blog is a journal, a record of my thoughts and experiences. If we are destined to repeat our mistakes, we should at least repeat them faithfully. If not, then perhaps the past is a mischievous guide and we should try something new.”

Meta

  • Entries RSS

Featured Posts

  • Hiring and Managing Investment Teams

  • Semi Liquid and Evergreen Funds

  • Towards a theory for impact capital

  • Market Outlook 2026

  • Ten Seconds Into The Future 2026

  • Purpose

  • AI, Entropy, and the Order of Knowledge

  • Impact Investing and Family Offices

  • How did we get here? Where do we go from here?

  • A Hundred Years of Capitalism: Fragile Prosperity

  • Free Markets, Capitalism and Inequality

  • Purpose

  • Why We Have Finite Lifespans

  • Ten Seconds Into The Future 2025 06

  • Long short, hedging and market neutrality under unruly markets

  • Ten Seconds Never Felt So Long. 2025 Trade War.

  • Tariff Wars. The Best Response to Tariffs is to Cut One’s Own.

  • 2025 Geo Macro Scenario A

  • Fiction. Foundation CG. 2025 02

  • Thoughts from the Bar Stool. 2025 02

  • Trump. Vichy. Lebensraum.

  • FICTION. Ten Seconds Into The Future 2025

  • A Few Thoughts about AI

  • Ten Seconds into 2025. This is Thin…

  • Efficiency X Robustness and Other Tradeoffs

Categories

  • Articles

Archives

  • RSS FEED

Copyright 2018 © Hedged.Biz All rights reserved

TOP