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Buyer Underwater $29k On a New Cari - It Gets Worse
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12-04-2024, 07:28 PM | #1 | |
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Buyer Underwater $29k On a New Cari - It Gets Worse
And in other Dumbass People News...
There's this Fool and their $$$$ soon to be parted. Customer tells dealer their willing to accept a $2500 car payment on a new GLE (midsize SUV) https://jalopnik.com/customer-tells-...-ca-1851713624 Quote:
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Last edited by TXSTYLE; 12-05-2024 at 02:29 PM.. |
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12-04-2024, 07:36 PM | #2 |
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"More than half of used car loans now carry loan-to-value ratios (LTVs ) above 120% — that means borrowers owe 20% more than their vehicle is worth…".
I just shake my head at car prices now along with their corresponding interest rates. I would never consider financing a vehicle at anything over 2.5%, but we now have people going 84 months at 7% plus. It's just mind blowing. The financial illiteracy one must possess to sign the line on a "deal" like that is incredible. |
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12-04-2024, 07:51 PM | #3 |
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These are the same people that will be screaming about needing a bailout later.
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12-04-2024, 08:12 PM | #5 |
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This just in - people are stupid and don’t know basic math. How much do you think people who bought $100k over sticker G wagons and $1M SF90’s are underwater? lol. I saw a video last week with a guy who owed over $700k on an SF90 and the dealer was offering him around 480k for it. He did not have the money to make up the difference.
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12-04-2024, 10:14 PM | #6 | |
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12-05-2024, 09:20 AM | #8 |
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"Yeah, yeah, yeah...................but what's my monthly payment? I'm not stupid........."
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12-05-2024, 09:29 AM | #9 | |
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12-05-2024, 09:35 AM | #10 |
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Sure feels like these extreme cases are strategic - continue to parlay neg eq to absurd levels then file BK and start over. All to keep up appearances. Wild stuff.
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12-05-2024, 10:10 AM | #11 | |
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I worked with a guy who was like $15k.underwater on a Jeep Commander. He was a smart guy, engineering degree and all that. In college he traded through like 3 brand new sports cars, losing money every time. When he graduated he married his college gf and wanted to flex and buy her a nice new big SUV. So he rolled all his negative equity that he had been rolling over onto the Jeep. Then after a few years he started having issues with it (they had put a ton of miles on it and it was very much not new when he bought it), and he would have rolled the negative equity over again if the banks had let him. By that point he owed like $17k on a car worth maybe $5k, and he went to buy a car that was selling at MSRP and no banks would finance him because of the negative equity. He ended up catching a break, bought a new house and sold his old one, and the proceeds of his old house he used to pay off the jeep and then went and traded it on a new jeep gladiator. Point is, people want to keep up with other people making terrible financial choices, so they make the same stupid mistakes. The amount of people who pay their car loans with other forms of debt is INSANE. Another guy I knew did this, he bought a car he couldn't really afford and was paying his car loan with a credit card. He kept getting cards that had 0% interest on balance transfers and just moved his debt around, never really making a dent in it. I haven't talked to him since interest rates went up, but I suspect that dried up most of those balance transfer offers and put him in a world of hurt. The sad part about it is he thought he was a genius for this. Thought he was getting one over on the system, and tried to convince other people to do it too. |
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12-05-2024, 10:47 AM | #12 |
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12-05-2024, 11:12 AM | #13 | |
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Also, I have great credit and get 0% balance transfer offers all the time. Everyone one of them came with a catch if you bother to read the details. I wouldn't even call it fine print because many times it's stated in the promo. All of the 0% balance transfers I was offered had a 3% balance transfer fee. So it's not free money and your friend is probably still adding to his debt thinking he's outsmarting the system with his 0% shell game. |
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12-05-2024, 12:28 PM | #14 |
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When I was in the car business, circa 1996 to 1999, I remember spending a few minutes before every pitch educating people on things like this by using the standard nomenclature.
For example. Every vehicle has 3 values; retail value, loan value, and wholesale value. I would go on to explain why these values are set, and how they work to protect the buyer, but how purchasing the wrong vehicle and trading too soon could still get you in deep water. Some listened and bought my Honda, some didn't and bought a Domestic. I only remember one instance where a customer returned to me specifically after making the Domestic mistake, purchasing a '98 (I think) Mercury Cougar XR7, then wanting to trade it for an Accord 7 short months later. I hated to give him the bad news, but I almost smiled when I did (I was young and stupid). He was over $15K upside down...in 1998. It seems he had already transferred part of his loan from the previous vehicle (being upside down) onto the Cougar, making matters much worse. He was, as we said in the industry, buried in the car. Sometime after that I saw lenders pushing to 100% of retail, then 120% of retail, then the crash, and now it's headed back up again. SSDD I guess. I'd like to think I'm smart, owning all 4 of my expensive cars outright and never paying anyone interest, but the truth is that I'm stupid too, as that same expense properly diversified in the market would have been a significant investment at this point. Oh well. |
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12-05-2024, 01:13 PM | #15 | |
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12-05-2024, 01:27 PM | #16 |
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so many things to unpack here...
1) the gotta have it mentality runs the world right now... sadly this has also driven inflation and pricing on things massively because there is a mass amount of irresponsible spenders... and yes social media is directly responsible for this on a large scale 2) far too easy availability of credit... no matter what or how poor your credit or salary is... you can always get qualified... less than 20% downpayment loans on depreciating assets like this and the fact that its allowed is cancer 3) negative equity - it is beyond me that this is allowed... the US must be the only country wild enough to allow this... back in the day, you would be walked out of a dealership and told to come back when you actually have money
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12-05-2024, 01:39 PM | #17 |
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Yeah, of course, nicer house, more financial freedom, nicer sports car. Investments are for ease of life and levels. But we have to live in the now as well, as tomorrow is no guarantee, so it's a balance for sure.
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12-05-2024, 01:58 PM | #18 |
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I didn't read the article, only the post, but it can be worth mentioning that some people may have the disposable income to waste on a vehicle if that's their prerogative. It's not a smart use of money, but in some circumstances it doesn't do you any good when you're dead and if there is nobody to will it off to. We don't have kids, and only my sister has 1, so there isn't much incentive to build a nest egg, may as well spend.
I've had car payments myself since basically 2005 (a small gap in there, though). With new cars since 2009, I have never traded until there was equity in the car. The cost has been constant payments from ~400 to ~1000 per month for the last 15 years. It's not as though I am bad with money, but I consciously chose to allocate a large proportion of my income to something I enjoy, which is vehicles. As of today, I'm now tired of making car payments and have found much less satisfaction in new cars, so I hope to finish this lease, pay out the car, and keep used cars moving forward without payments. Sure, I could have had more money in the bank and a bigger retirement fund to date, but if all goes to plan, I don't think I'll be hurting financially in the long run. I paid to play, but at least I did it willingly knowing what I am forgoing in the process. |
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12-05-2024, 01:58 PM | #19 | |
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12-05-2024, 02:25 PM | #20 | |
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The difference today is higher interest rates and even my credit union lists the rate for an 84 month auto loan. |
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12-05-2024, 02:48 PM | #21 | |
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12-05-2024, 03:07 PM | #22 |
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In 1998 buying a Domestic car and not planning to keep it at least 4 years in excellent condition was absolutely a mistake.
Yeah, there was a bit of a crash and lenders weren't even going 70% for a while. It's been many years since I was in the car business, but these things cycle. |
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