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As with credit cards and mortgages, North Dakota has the best payment record, with a delinquency rate of just 0.28 percent. Mississippi has the highest delinquency rate, at 1.05 percent. The lingering effects of the recession are likely playing out in some regions, Turek said, because auto loan payments are more closely correlated with unemployment than other borrowing like credit cards, which consumers typically treat as a higher priority. Mainly because of seasonal patterns, TransUnion expects the auto delinquency rate to tick up to about 0.6 percent by the end of the year. Delinquency rates on auto loans tend to fall in the first half of the year and remain flat or rise later in the year. The figure remains still slightly higher than the historical norm. Turek said auto sales will have to return to more normal levels
-- about 16 million cars per year from roughly 11 million now -- for the delinquency rate to fall further.
[Associated
Press;
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