The debt spiral is real. More borrowers are stacking yesterday's car loans onto today's purchases, pushing loan terms past the seven-year mark just to keep monthly payments from strangling their budgets. It's not ownership anymore—it's subscription with wheels. The line between owning and renting is blurring fast. What used to be about having an asset has become about managing cash flow. The financing model is shifting from purchase to perpetual payment. Whether it's vehicles or digital assets, the pattern's the same: fewer people own outright, more people pay indefinitely. The "rentification" of consumer goods isn't just about cars anymore.
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GateUser-a5fa8bd0
· 10h ago
7-year loan term... truly incredible, this is modern slavery, isn't it?
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HypotheticalLiquidator
· 10h ago
The debt spiral keeps turning and can't be stopped... Seven years of car loans stacking on top of eight years of car loans, the borrowing rate has long since exploded. This is a typical sign of an impending chain reaction of margin calls.
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FloorSweeper
· 10h ago
7 years of car loan, it has truly become a permanent lease.
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PaperHandSister
· 10h ago
Oh man, seven years of car loan isn't enough, now they're switching to a subscription model directly.
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DeepRabbitHole
· 10h ago
ngl people these days are really tied down, seven-year car loans, what the heck... Isn't this just leasing with a different name?
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NFTArchaeologis
· 10h ago
This is actually a modern version of "perpetual tenancy"... completely virtualizing asset ownership. From ancient manorial systems to today's subscription models, humanity has always been repeating the same script.
The debt spiral is real. More borrowers are stacking yesterday's car loans onto today's purchases, pushing loan terms past the seven-year mark just to keep monthly payments from strangling their budgets. It's not ownership anymore—it's subscription with wheels. The line between owning and renting is blurring fast. What used to be about having an asset has become about managing cash flow. The financing model is shifting from purchase to perpetual payment. Whether it's vehicles or digital assets, the pattern's the same: fewer people own outright, more people pay indefinitely. The "rentification" of consumer goods isn't just about cars anymore.