Über plans to fuck over the auto loan market

kuu

Rising Star
Registered
Uber had a similar program when I started 2 years ago. I had to put $1000 dollars down though.... got a toyota avalon and wound up paying $300 per week.... plus my other car note and thus car insurance for 2 cars. Man I was glad I was able to pay it but I was stressed thee fuck out man. I think I was the first in history to return an uber vehicle lol. Dealership didn't know what to do lol. I was like... "Bye niggaa!"(Dave Chappelle voice)
 

Mt. Yukon

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
The one dude was paying $640 a month for a ford escape. That's like 3 monthly payments. :eek:

JJ3HTE.gif

:lol: How high are their interest rates??? Goddamn!!!
 

water

Transparent, tasteless, odorless
OG Investor
G


50 minutes late .....smelling like a mixture of farts, cigarettes and boiled eggs with snotty tissue stuffed in the seat back pocket...



Bro

There is machine learning going on.

You might not even eventually need THAT particular car but rather any Uber car in the vicinity.

Right now your uber cars are not in that condition so what makes you think this will happen?

There would be rules in place as well as a review system to weed out the bullshit on both ends, drivers and passengers.
 

Famous1

Rising Star
Platinum Member
Bro

There is machine learning going on.

You might not even eventually need THAT particular car but rather any Uber car in the vicinity.

Right now your uber cars are not in that condition so what makes you think this will happen?

There would be rules in place as well as a review system to weed out the bullshit on both ends, drivers and passengers.

Rules.... Yeah that'll make sure nobody fucks your shit up or leaves zika virus on the door handle... World war z anyone?
 

deputy dawg

~wait a cotton pickin' minute...
BGOL Investor
won't surprise me to see Uber just having a fleet of their own vehicles in major cities and instead of BYOC (bring your own car), just bring a body with a valid license lol

already done.
zipcar is that concept.
 

water

Transparent, tasteless, odorless
OG Investor
Rules.... Yeah that'll make sure nobody fucks your shit up or leaves zika virus on the door handle... World war z anyone?



so what stops you now from taking a taxi?

zika?


come on Bro
smh.....
 

Mask

"OneOfTheBest"
Platinum Member
Apple dripping into also...small but it's something






Ride with Uber and Apple Pay


Set up Apple Pay and take the most rides from July 29 through August 5 to win 100 rides with Uber (up to $10 each).


It's the smartest way to ride (and pay) this summer.


Terms and Conditions

* Only rides taken in the U.S. paid for using Apple Pay are eligible. Valid through 12/31/2016. We reserve the right to withhold rewards that we determine or believe were in error, fraudulent, illegal, or in violation of the Uber User terms or these terms.
 

water

Transparent, tasteless, odorless
OG Investor
Apple dripping into also...small but it's something






Ride with Uber and Apple Pay


Set up Apple Pay and take the most rides from July 29 through August 5 to win 100 rides with Uber (up to $10 each).


It's the smartest way to ride (and pay) this summer.


Terms and Conditions

* Only rides taken in the U.S. paid for using Apple Pay are eligible. Valid through 12/31/2016. We reserve the right to withhold rewards that we determine or believe were in error, fraudulent, illegal, or in violation of the Uber User terms or these terms.




good look


:cheers:
 

Mask

"OneOfTheBest"
Platinum Member


MAKING BUSINESS TRAVEL MAGIC WITH CONCUR

Today, we are excited to announce a strategic partnership with Concur Technologies, the world’s leading travel and expense management company, to revolutionize the way that companies move their employees around the world.

Our partnership with Concur began in 2014 with a goal of improving their client’s employee expensing experiences. This next phase of our partnership is even bigger, and is fully focused on improving the company experience, particularly for companies with significant ground transportation spend.

With this partnership, we are deeply integrating our technology with Concur to enable companies to directly create an Uber for Business account for all employees with just a few clicks. This integration will make Uber for Business account setup and management seamless and automatic for Concur customers, and help large companies embrace ridesharing by incorporating Uber for Business into their existing travel management policies. Companies will save money, and gain unprecedented visibility into their employee’s Uber usage.

“Concur’s average enterprise customer expenses almost $1 million in ground transportation annually and about 7% of that is with Uber today. By shifting more spend to Uber these companies stand to save hundreds of thousands of dollars” said Elena Donio, president of Concur. “We’ve seen almost 230% growth in Uber transactions in the past year and with this integration we expect to see that growth accelerate as we help companies leverage the benefits of Uber as part of their travel program.”

It is challenging for multinational companies to navigate the modern business travel landscape, but Concur and Uber for Business are uniquely positioned to help them embrace these changes and benefit from the added visibility, control, and cost savings that today’s technology provides.

Uber for Business is constantly evolving to improve the business travel experience for every type of company around the world – from small businesses to large enterprises. We are proud to partner with Concur to create a dramatically better experience for our customers and their employees.

The Concur product integration will launch in Q4 of 2016 through the Concur App Center. For more information, visit concur.com/appcenter/u4b.
 

Mask

"OneOfTheBest"
Platinum Member



Peace Of Mind When Your Family Is On The Go



May 17, 2016
Posted by Marie Hagman

Whether you have a spouse traveling for work, a daughter heading home from college, or a parent going to a doctor’s appointment — ensuring your loved ones are taken care of when you’re not together extends beyond just covering the cost of a ride. That’s why we’re taking Family Profiles one step further with Trip Tracker, a feature that provides automatic notifications and the ability to follow along on the map whenever someone is riding under your Family Profile.
At Uber, we are constantly looking for new ways to use technology to improve safety for riders and drivers. Trip Tracker uses sophisticated technology to bring you peace of mind while your nearest and dearest ride on Uber. So, the next time one of your family members is headed out – you’ll know when they are on their way, which route they are taking and when they’ve arrived.
Here’s how it works:
Make sure you have the latest version of the Uber app.
Set up your Family Profile.
When one of your members takes a ride with Uber under the Family Profile, you’ll be automatically notified with their trip details.
You can follow the trip’s progress live on the map within your own Uber app.
The cost of the ride is automatically billed to you and you will both receive a copy of the receipt.
Family Profiles are now available to riders around the world. No matter which city your loved ones are riding in – Trip Tracker helps you stay in the know when your group is on the go.
Categories: Headlines
 

Famous1

Rising Star
Platinum Member



Peace Of Mind When Your Family Is On The Go



May 17, 2016
Posted by Marie Hagman

Whether you have a spouse traveling for work, a daughter heading home from college, or a parent going to a doctor’s appointment — ensuring your loved ones are taken care of when you’re not together extends beyond just covering the cost of a ride. That’s why we’re taking Family Profiles one step further with Trip Tracker, a feature that provides automatic notifications and the ability to follow along on the map whenever someone is riding under your Family Profile.
At Uber, we are constantly looking for new ways to use technology to improve safety for riders and drivers. Trip Tracker uses sophisticated technology to bring you peace of mind while your nearest and dearest ride on Uber. So, the next time one of your family members is headed out – you’ll know when they are on their way, which route they are taking and when they’ve arrived.
Here’s how it works:
Make sure you have the latest version of the Uber app.
Set up your Family Profile.
When one of your members takes a ride with Uber under the Family Profile, you’ll be automatically notified with their trip details.
You can follow the trip’s progress live on the map within your own Uber app.
The cost of the ride is automatically billed to you and you will both receive a copy of the receipt.
Family Profiles are now available to riders around the world. No matter which city your loved ones are riding in – Trip Tracker helps you stay in the know when your group is on the go.
Categories: Headlines


oh yeah...... now i can track that hoe's every move...:hellyea:....step my stalking game up..
 

VAiz4hustlaz

Proud ADOS and not afraid to step to da mic!
BGOL Investor
One Uber Driver’s Story: How He Was Trapped by Auto-Loan Program
RS14893_IMG_2869.JPG-qut-e1429730046584-1440x1080.jpg


Richard Brunelle and his wife, Barbara Lynn, feel trapped by a car loan they got through Uber's financing program. (Sam Harnett/KQED)

By Sam Harnett APRIL 24, 2015

Richard Brunelle says he feels trapped. He says he has to drive for Uber.

The San Leandro man needs to make money for car payments. His 48-month loan is costing him $1,000 a month and has a 22.75 percent interest rate. He says he got into this mess through a vehicle financing program Uber created for drivers with poor or nonexistent credit.

Since November 2013, Uber has been signing up drivers without cars or the credit to get one. The ride-service company connects drivers with car dealerships and a variety of lenders, some of which specialize in subprime auto loans. It promises to get them a car in less than a week.


The promotional video for the program says: “Everyone deserves to have a success story. Let Uber be part of yours.”

Uber says it created the financing program after hearing from potential drivers that they couldn’t get cars. It has not released data on exactly how many drivers have used the program, but Uber says thousands have signed up.

Here’s Uber’s pitch for why banks should give loans to people with no credit: Its drivers are a safe bet regardless of their credit scores because they have a steady source of income — the money they make driving. Economist William Black says that’s faulty logic.

Black is a former bank regulator who researches and writes on subprime auto loans. He says it’s risky to give these loans to people with poor credit. In the case of Uber drivers, Black says, all kinds of things could go wrong and prevent them from making the high-interest car payments.

For instance, driver income could change overnight if Uber decides to cut its rates, which it has done repeatedly. Drivers could get sick or injured. If they don’t have savings, which many people with poor credit do not, drivers won’t be able to make the payments and the car could get repossessed.

The “bottom line is, you need to underwrite these individuals,” Black says. In other words, the drivers should have co-signers for the loans. And they don’t.

Instead, Uber is working with lenders such as Santander Consumer USA, the American consumer finance unit of a Spanish banking group. The subsidiary has a
subsidiary has a history of regulatory problems. These lenders make subprime auto loans, charging high interest rates to people with no credit or bad credit.

Brunelle, 58, started driving for Uber last August. He thought it would be a nice retirement job after working in the Navy, in a prison, in construction and as a truck driver. But Brunelle didn’t have a car — he rode a motorcycle — and he says he had no credit because he’d always avoided credit cards. His wife told him about Uber’s financing program and he decided to give it a try.

Uber connected Brunelle to a dealership and lender. Things did not go smoothly from there.

Brunelle says the dealer sold him a car that didn’t qualify for the discount Uber promises as part of the financial package. He says the dealer also quoted him a different rate verbally than the rate on the paperwork he signed.

When Brunelle got home, he realized he had signed a loan with a 22.75 percent interest rate. That means he will end up paying around $49,000 on a Kia Optima that normally retails for about $25,000.

“I tried to refinance this car last week and there’s just too much overhead on the car right now that I can’t get a re-fi on it,” Brunelle says.

The dealer won’t take the car back and Uber won’t help him try to sort this out, says Brunelle. Now the loan is “like a ball and chain,” he says.

He says the financing program is just a scheme to get more drivers on the road so that Uber can make more profits. He says, “I feel like Uber not only tossed us to these wolves, but they intentionally did it and they are making bank on it.”

Uber adds “that the agreement is between the driver and the lender — rates are determined by the lender and the purchaser must agree to the rates.”

In other words, drivers are on their own when it comes to finalizing the financial deal.


As far as Brunelle’s specific situation, Uber says: “We provide drivers with a list of specific cars where an Uber discount applies, and the Kia Optima is not on the list. However, drivers are free to choose whatever car they’d like.”

The company says drivers should be able to make the loan payments for these cars by working 10 hours a week. But Brunelle says that math doesn’t work out.

After Uber cut drivers’ rates again last fall, Brunelle says he’s working most of the week just to cover his loan payments and driving expenses. He’s working just to break even.

Now he is posting on forums, warning other drivers not to take the financing. Otherwise, he says, they could end up trapped like him.

https://ww2.kqed.org/news/2015/04/24/one-uber-drivers-story-how-he-was-trapped-by-auto-loan-program/
 

gene cisco

Not A BGOL Eunuch
BGOL Investor
One Uber Driver’s Story: How He Was Trapped by Auto-Loan Program
RS14893_IMG_2869.JPG-qut-e1429730046584-1440x1080.jpg


Richard Brunelle and his wife, Barbara Lynn, feel trapped by a car loan they got through Uber's financing program. (Sam Harnett/KQED)

By Sam Harnett APRIL 24, 2015

Richard Brunelle says he feels trapped. He says he has to drive for Uber.

The San Leandro man needs to make money for car payments. His 48-month loan is costing him $1,000 a month and has a 22.75 percent interest rate. He says he got into this mess through a vehicle financing program Uber created for drivers with poor or nonexistent credit.

Since November 2013, Uber has been signing up drivers without cars or the credit to get one. The ride-service company connects drivers with car dealerships and a variety of lenders, some of which specialize in subprime auto loans. It promises to get them a car in less than a week.


The promotional video for the program says: “Everyone deserves to have a success story. Let Uber be part of yours.”

Uber says it created the financing program after hearing from potential drivers that they couldn’t get cars. It has not released data on exactly how many drivers have used the program, but Uber says thousands have signed up.

Here’s Uber’s pitch for why banks should give loans to people with no credit: Its drivers are a safe bet regardless of their credit scores because they have a steady source of income — the money they make driving. Economist William Black says that’s faulty logic.

Black is a former bank regulator who researches and writes on subprime auto loans. He says it’s risky to give these loans to people with poor credit. In the case of Uber drivers, Black says, all kinds of things could go wrong and prevent them from making the high-interest car payments.

For instance, driver income could change overnight if Uber decides to cut its rates, which it has done repeatedly. Drivers could get sick or injured. If they don’t have savings, which many people with poor credit do not, drivers won’t be able to make the payments and the car could get repossessed.

The “bottom line is, you need to underwrite these individuals,” Black says. In other words, the drivers should have co-signers for the loans. And they don’t.

Instead, Uber is working with lenders such as Santander Consumer USA, the American consumer finance unit of a Spanish banking group. The subsidiary has a
subsidiary has a history of regulatory problems. These lenders make subprime auto loans, charging high interest rates to people with no credit or bad credit.

Brunelle, 58, started driving for Uber last August. He thought it would be a nice retirement job after working in the Navy, in a prison, in construction and as a truck driver. But Brunelle didn’t have a car — he rode a motorcycle — and he says he had no credit because he’d always avoided credit cards. His wife told him about Uber’s financing program and he decided to give it a try.

Uber connected Brunelle to a dealership and lender. Things did not go smoothly from there.

Brunelle says the dealer sold him a car that didn’t qualify for the discount Uber promises as part of the financial package. He says the dealer also quoted him a different rate verbally than the rate on the paperwork he signed.

When Brunelle got home, he realized he had signed a loan with a 22.75 percent interest rate. That means he will end up paying around $49,000 on a Kia Optima that normally retails for about $25,000.

“I tried to refinance this car last week and there’s just too much overhead on the car right now that I can’t get a re-fi on it,” Brunelle says.

The dealer won’t take the car back and Uber won’t help him try to sort this out, says Brunelle. Now the loan is “like a ball and chain,” he says.

He says the financing program is just a scheme to get more drivers on the road so that Uber can make more profits. He says, “I feel like Uber not only tossed us to these wolves, but they intentionally did it and they are making bank on it.”

Uber adds “that the agreement is between the driver and the lender — rates are determined by the lender and the purchaser must agree to the rates.”

In other words, drivers are on their own when it comes to finalizing the financial deal.


As far as Brunelle’s specific situation, Uber says: “We provide drivers with a list of specific cars where an Uber discount applies, and the Kia Optima is not on the list. However, drivers are free to choose whatever car they’d like.”

The company says drivers should be able to make the loan payments for these cars by working 10 hours a week. But Brunelle says that math doesn’t work out.

After Uber cut drivers’ rates again last fall, Brunelle says he’s working most of the week just to cover his loan payments and driving expenses. He’s working just to break even.

Now he is posting on forums, warning other drivers not to take the financing. Otherwise, he says, they could end up trapped like him.

https://ww2.kqed.org/news/2015/04/24/one-uber-drivers-story-how-he-was-trapped-by-auto-loan-program/

And so the sob stories begin. :lol2: :roflmao3: Dumb fuck GETS HOME and THEN READS the paperwork. :eek: The politicians that don't like Uber will be all over these sob stories until Uber breaks them off that Uber money.

It's all in the game. You earn, you kick up.
 

VAiz4hustlaz

Proud ADOS and not afraid to step to da mic!
BGOL Investor
And so the sob stories begin. :lol2: :roflmao3: Dumb fuck GETS HOME and THEN READS the paperwork. :eek: The politicians that don't like Uber will be all over these sob stories until Uber breaks them off that Uber money.

It's all in the game. You earn, you kick up.

Yeah, he only listened to what the dealer said and got played.
 

Louis Koo

Star
BGOL Investor
these auto loans are gonna blow up. once they are made, it's gonna be securitized into a bespoke tranche opportunity, and investors are gonna get fucked, as will the borrowers.

 

VAiz4hustlaz

Proud ADOS and not afraid to step to da mic!
BGOL Investor
these auto loans are gonna blow up. once they are made, it's gonna be securitized into a bespoke tranche opportunity, and investors are gonna get fucked, as will the borrowers.



I'm still shocked no one ever went to jail for this shit.
 
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