A bunch of car repo's. How does one get a car without even registering the thing? Not to mention having a loan against an unregistered car.
In California, and with some other states IIRC, the registration follows the car, not the buyer.
So. A car is sold, say in December. Every year in December the plates come due. But the car is traded in in March, and someone buys it off a lot in April.
The eight months of registration that go with the car (in California it's incredibly expensive) is a real selling point. But then, since he makes no payment since signing the note...why renew the plates? He can't without the lender's paperwork, anyway. I think maybe the bank or finance company has to initiate registration renewal.
Interesting situation: I bought one of my cars at CarMax. It was overpriced, but not wildly; and it was what I wanted, and there. It was in Washington, 200 miles and two states away.
I bought it, with financing in-house. Because I knew the insurance check was in the pipeline, and I had a grace period where I could pay back the principle and be charged nothing...which I did.
But I left the dealer with a 72-hour transport tag (all Washington would allow to out-of-state buyers) and all the paperwork to register the car. Had I been up to mischief, I could have just said the hell with it, and driven it with a stolen plate. I had a binder from my insurance agent, but I wasn't sure I'd buy the car until I actually did.
So, it depends on the state.
What that mess in the video looks like, is stupid bankers, low-tier loan officers, being pressured to sign loans...and buyers, WAY down on the dark side of the Bell Curve. I wouldn't borrow anything at 15 percent, certainly not a used car.
Absolute insanity. But sadder is that these older used cars are really the best buys - unlike the new, hyper-computerized ones with all the start-stop and emissions crap, the older ones could be repaired at a reasonable rate. A new car...I wouldn't own one. If I had to, I'd lease one - but they're not designed to last, or to be serviced once out of their warranty.