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Bad car loans, personal finance mistakes, negative equity, EV depreciation, auto loan debt, upside-down car loans, student loan debt, budgeting, and debt payoff are all in today’s video as we break down massive financial mistakes and real-life debt stories. This personal finance video is packed with car loan advice, negative equity lessons, and real examples of bad auto loans that show why budgeting and debt planning matter more than anything. If you’re dealing with bad car loans, upside-down auto loans, huge student loan balances, high car payments, or negative equity from an EV like a Mustang Mach-E, this video covers every major personal finance keyword: debt payoff, budgeting, overspending, financial literacy, auto loan mistakes, refinancing, new car loans, used car loans, and why EV depreciation destroys resale value. Today’s breakdown includes a couple who are $31,000 upside down on their Mustang Mach-E, a woman blaming a dealership for damage she clearly caused, another woman with three previous repos, people earning massive incomes but drowning in debt, and young adults carrying shocking amounts of student loans without budgeting or planning. These are the exact personal finance situations that show how bad car loans, overspending, negative equity, acting without a budget, and poor financial literacy can destroy a person’s financial future. We start with the couple regretting their EV purchase. EV depreciation has become one of the biggest issues in the auto loan world. People jump into electric vehicles because they’re “new tech,” but the resale value crashes hard. When a car loses value faster than the loan balance drops, you get negative equity, and that’s how someone ends up $31K upside down on a Mustang Mach-E. This is one of the worst situations in personal finance and auto financing. When you’re buried in a car loan, the worst move is to roll that debt into another car with higher payments. That’s how the bad car loan cycle continues. From there, we look at a woman who clearly ran over something but is trying to blame the dealership. Instead of taking responsibility, she threatens legal action and claims dishonesty over issues she caused. This is another personal finance pattern: no accountability, no budgeting, no planning, and expecting someone else to fix the financial mess. It happens constantly with car buyers who overextend themselves. Then we get into the woman with three repossessions. Repos show up on a credit report for years and make auto loans extremely difficult. Getting approved after multiple repos usually means higher interest rates, bigger down payments, and stricter loan terms. Yet she’s shocked she needs $2,000 down on a used Ford Fusion. Someone with three repos isn’t being refused — the bank is being generous even considering her. But again, no planning, no budgeting, and no personal finance awareness. After that, we see a couple making around $350K per year but buried in over $400,000 of total debt. This proves a key personal finance truth: high income does not guarantee wealth. People earning six figures can still fall deep into debt if they have bad habits, no budget, and no plan. Spending more than you earn will bury anyone, no matter what the paycheck looks like. Car loans, luxury purchases, student loans, and lifestyle creep all contribute to massive financial problems. Next is a 24-year-old woman with $188,000 in student loan debt, plus a car loan, credit cards, and insurance. Her Sallie Mae payment alone is $1,800 per month. That payment is bigger than many people’s rent. When you take on massive student loans without understanding interest rates or calculating long-term payments, you end up trapped before life even starts. Personal finance literacy, budgeting, and understanding debt repayment are essential for avoiding years of financial struggle. Then we see another woman who is $90,000 in debt but just bought a Mercedes. This is one of the most common personal finance mistakes: spending to look successful instead of building stability. A Mercedes does not fix your debt. High payments and luxury maintenance only make things worse. Solving $90K in debt requires budgeting, sacrifice, and long-term planning — not adding a luxury auto loan on top. Chapters: 0:00 – Intro 1:00 – EV Hype Regret 1:14 – $31K Upside Down 2:01 – Blaming the Dealer 3:00 – No Accountability 4:00 – Three Repos 5:08 – Repo on Purpose 5:23 – High Income, Big Debt 6:19 – $188K at 24 7:13 – $1,800 Payment 9:23 – $90K & a Mercedes 10:34 – No Budget, No Plan 11:00 – “Marry Rich” Plan 12:01 – Outro #Cardebt #PersonalFinance #Money #Finance #Investing