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| Scion FR-S / Toyota 86 GT86 General Forum The place to start for the Scion FR-S / Toyota 86 | GT86 |
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#15 | |
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#16 |
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Unless the dealership is offering an incentive like an extended warranty (doubtful), you get the same deal either way. Scion has pure pricing and the dealership gets $25k regardless of what you do. Financing is just a service they provide... unless it's a special incentive, it's probably not worth it IMO if you have the option to just pay it off.
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#17 |
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#18 |
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What I would do if I had that much in the bank: I would take financing and pay it off in large amounts. If you take a 1.9% deal and pay it off in less than a year your credit will sky rocket. Just take 60mo loan and pay it off in 5mo with 5k each payment. That way you still have money in the bank for an emergency fund
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You could always pay off a certain amount and renegotiate your payments to be lower though. |
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#20 |
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Thanks for the advice.
Can you tell me how do I pay cash exactly without running the the bank to get a cashiers check in the middle of the transaction? The reason I need to pay cash is because I am in the middle of a mortage refi (looong process) and I do not want to start a new credit or even get a inquiry on my credit right now. Most of the cash will come from the vehicle I just sold. |
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#21 | |
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Most dealers will run an electronic check (they process your regular check while you are sitting there). Really, its no different than when they finance and let you drive off the lot with the car. They don't really have their money yet. You can also just ask them how they would like to handle the transaction up front, as it may vary between dealers. For example, the dealer I bought mine through would not take cash for the down-payment to hold the car. They would only take a check or credit card because they didn't want to have that much cash on site. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Dadhawk For This Useful Post: | FRSCoupe (06-19-2012) |
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#22 | |
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At least two years ago they scrutinized my loan history and I have excellent credit and lots of cash on hand and in investments. |
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#23 |
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I'd rather take a loan out on the car, put the rest into a home using FHA and rent it out... the profit right there is the car payment... and income after it's paid off in 72 months.
Not to mention the house would appreciate in value in this market. If you come out on top over the interest rates offered to you by banks, then it's kind of a no brainer? Either it makes sense, or it doesn't. Banks make money on lending money away. In order for them to have money in the first place, they need to offer interest rates to people who deposit money into their banks. If you don't want to worry about having to make payment (becoming a slave to the financial system), by all means, pay it off outright. You won't have to babysit your funds then.
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#24 | |
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I consider the majority of investments to be gambles. I can't tell you how many people I know over the past 6 years or so that took out home equity loans, big car loans, etc and invested in what was considered safe investments and lost their shirts. Look at places like Arizona, Florida, California, etc where people took out massive loans for rental properties or flips and lost everything. I don't buy that we are completely out of the weeds. Europe is a mess. Unemployement is still high. Health insurance has some huge question marks. A huge percentage of Americans owe more on their house than it is worth. And our country seems to have no answer for the amount of debt we are taking on and how to pay it back. Hint. Taxing just the rich aint gonna even put a dent in our debt, so as usual, the middle class will carry the burden. Last edited by thill; 06-19-2012 at 02:43 PM. |
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#25 | |
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In your scenario you are doing two things that create risk. First, you are taking out a loan that requires repayment. At the same time, you are assuming that the home you purchase will appreciate (we all have learned in the past several years there is no guarantee of that at least over 5 years), and you are taking on a even larger amount of risk by taking a loan on the home since you mention FHA. On the other hand, if you pay cash for your car, you are "out the money" and any differential you could have profited (note that is not the same as "earned") from the investment. Don't forget to include costs for such things as taxes, interest on both loans, etc in figuring out what you really "earned". The only risk you have with the paid off car is that if you run into a situation where you need money from the car, you must sell it probably at a wholesale or slightly higher value for a quick sale. Just food for thought. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Dadhawk For This Useful Post: | Ess Vee (06-19-2012) |
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#26 | |
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#27 | |
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Again, I'm not saying its a "bad" idea, its just not a no-brainer. |
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#28 |
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Yeah, I would just count any appreciation as a bonus. Thanks for the different perspective, guys!
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