Q&A: What happens if a finance company never repossesses a vehicle that has been discharged in bankruptcy?

Question by lucky: What happens if a finance company never repossesses a vehicle that has been discharged in bankruptcy?
What happens if a finance company never repossesses a vehicle that has been discharged in bankruptcy? No payments have been made in 14 months…Bankruptcy discharged in June of this year. Finance company has our current address and phone number.

Best answer:

Answer by B-Jo
There are different type of bankruptcies. Some bankruptcies give your the option to surrender the articles disclosed in the bankruptcy. Other options are for you to include all articles in the bankruptcy but you keep possession of the merchandise, or You may still have possession of the articles but before the date given on the bankruptcy clause, the companies in which you still have the articles will come and declare them at that given time.

This information should me explained in the forms you signed off on. Read back over everything and you will be able to get a better understanding of what’s expected of you and what you can expect in this bankruptcy.

Hope this helps.

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Do you agree that the profession of “Economist” and all related professions have been thoroughly discredited?

Question by billke: Do you agree that the profession of “Economist” and all related professions have been thoroughly discredited?
No one predicted and prevented this financial crisis. If anything, the prevailing view of Economists was to add fuel to the flames due to their insistance on globalization, securitization, and idiotic interest rate policies.

But the main point is… why the fck didn’t anyone predict this before it happened. WHy are all these economists with PhD’s running bloviating their theories, yet did absolutely nothing to predict or prevent this. They are all bull-shyt artists.

Best answer:

Answer by SDD
On the contrary. Many, many economists* and other observers predicted this sort of thing based on the way Congress encouraged Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to buy government subsidized high risk loans. The Senate even considered a bill in 2005 to block more of this sort of lending, but Democrats blocked it.

* To name one — Bob Schiller of Yale. You’ll recall that he was also the one that warned about the “irrational exuberance” of the stock market in the late 90s. Few responded then either.

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