Dan Mahalek
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- Mar 6, 2020
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In light of today’s terrible news on the economy, I was wondering, how many Telly owners or prospective owners paid cash or plan to pay cash for their car?
What was different about today than many other days in the last 3-4 months?
Probably referring to this:
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US economy posts its worst drop on record
The US economy contracted at a 32.9% annual rate from April through June, its worst drop on record, the Bureau of Economic Analysis said Thursday.www.cnn.com
Last quarter is history... that news is already a month old. This quarter will have a rebound.
I'm not here to debate or play an economist. I was simply providing context, for the record if I had to guess, I'd guess you are wrong. Well I mean, depends on rebound. Anything better than a 32.9% drop could technically be considered a rebound.
elaborate further. What are you getting at?In light of today’s terrible news on the economy, I was wondering, how many Telly owners or prospective owners paid cash or plan to pay cash for their car?
In light of today’s terrible news on the economy, I was wondering, how many Telly owners or prospective owners paid cash or plan to pay cash for their car?
If you can get 0.9%/48 mos, why pay cash? That's pretty close to free money. Now if there was an incentive to pay cash by the dealership (there's not), it would be different.
If you can get 0.9%/48 mos, why pay cash? That's pretty close to free money. Now if there was an incentive to pay cash by the dealership (there's not), it would be different.
I am impressed you could fit one of those monstrosities in your garage.That said - if I win the lottery - a new Yukon Denali will be in my garage ASAP. LOL...then my daughter can have the Telluride.![]()
Excellent points about really figuring out what you can afford, but this sentence I disagree with. I think plenty of folks pay cash for the cars they can afford. My dad always paid cash and that meant his cars didn't have bells and whistles since he bought cars when the wheels fell off and bought what was in his budget. I know others that pay cash and their cars aren't BMW or MB but Fords or Chevys.I'd guess that most people who can pay all cash are probably looking at other brands besides Kia (Audi, BMW, etc). With that said, I agree with @MarcinTexas that it's a personal preference with how much cash you can part with for the down payment.
I'd guess that most people who can pay all cash are probably looking at other brands besides Kia (Audi, BMW, etc). With that said, I agree with @MarcinTexas that it's a personal preference with how much cash you can part with for the down payment.
My Telly is $48.5K and I'm putting $15K down. Thankfully, my job is secure (knock on wood) however I need to factor in my wedding this year (if it can still happen), honeymoon (if we can still travel *anywhere*), and purchasing a house next year (in California). Lots of major question marks, but my company and industry are proving resilient through the pandemic.
If you haven't already, I recommend having an honest conversation with yourself about how much car you can afford: total monthly income, total monthly expenses, and then working in your down payment + monthly down payment. If anyone likes, happy to share the budgeting worksheet I built to determine how much car you can afford.
This is the first time I'm purchasing a car so it was quite revealing going through this exercise.
I'd guess that most people who can pay all cash are probably looking at other brands besides Kia (Audi, BMW, etc). With that said, I agree with @MarcinTexas that it's a personal preference with how much cash you can part with for the down payment.
My Telly is $48.5K and I'm putting $15K down. Thankfully, my job is secure (knock on wood) however I need to factor in my wedding this year (if it can still happen), honeymoon (if we can still travel *anywhere*), and purchasing a house next year (in California). Lots of major question marks, but my company and industry are proving resilient through the pandemic.
If you haven't already, I recommend having an honest conversation with yourself about how much car you can afford: total monthly income, total monthly expenses, and then working in your down payment + monthly down payment. If anyone likes, happy to share the budgeting worksheet I built to determine how much car you can afford.
This is the first time I'm purchasing a car so it was quite revealing going through this exercise.
It’s a good point you raise. My current car has already rounded the final turn of its life and is racing towards the finish line, so it is needing to be replaced. Many ways to steer this convo, but simplest is my fiancée and I have have a carefully built savings plan for those purchases and adding the new car expense does not disrupt the plan or timelineWith all those other purchases, there’s an argument that you should put LESS down on your Telly and use that $15k for other more useful needs. Car financing will be cheaper than credit cards and mortgage.
There will never be an incentive to pay with cash because a dealer makes more money on leases and financing
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