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Avoid the alluring pitfalls of
buying a car
A former car dealer's book explains
where the big savings are -- and it isn't about haggling over price.
The Miami Herald -
Posted on Sunday, 04/04/10
BY GREGORY KARP
THE MORNING CALL (ALLENTOWN, PA.)
Car
buyers often focus on haggling down a dealer's offer toward invoice
price. That's OK, but often that's not where the real money is, says a
former car dealer in his new book.
Instead of the purchase price,
consumers should focus on other components of the deal, especially
loans, trade-ins and their desire to buy more car than they can afford,
said Mark Ragsdale, author of Car Wreck: How You Got Rear-Ended, Run
Over & Crushed by the U.S. Auto Industry.
``You'd be better off paying MSRP
and paying attention to the big stuff,'' Ragsdale said. ``But dealer
profitability gets the lion's share of consumer focus and attention.''
Here, Ragsdale said, are a few
things to consider other than price:
But even many people who have
owned their cars for years are upside-down. It's typical to own a car
three or four years before your car is worth what you owe on it. This
depreciation snowballs as consumers get car fever before they have
equity in their vehicle. Dealers and auto lenders can accommodate
these people by essentially rolling that negative equity into their
next car loan -- often keeping the payments reasonable by extending
the loan.
Customers trade in their cars
every 39 months on average, but finance them for an average of 64
months, Ragsdale said. That leaves many upside-down by an average of
$4,700, Edmunds.com said. The lesson? Don't buy a new vehicle until
you pay off your current one.
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Trade-in value: Many
factors affect trade-in value, including a massive recall such as the
one Toyota is experiencing. Among the best resources for finding the
value of your car are online car-buying sites, Ragsdale said.
Edmunds.com ,
KBB.com
and your insurance agent can provide used-car prices, too, but they
might not be as ``real-time'' as prices on cars for sale at this
moment, he said.
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Rule of 78s: This method
of calculating loans is essentially a prepayment penalty because it
front-loads the interest. You will be on the hook for most of the
interest, even if you pay the loan off early or trade in the car. The
figure 78 comes from the sum of the digits one through 12 -- the
number of months in a year -- and from a time when most loans were for
12 months. You want a simple-interest auto loan.
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Simple math: When you see
an advertised payment of less than $400, ask yourself how reasonable
that is.
Simple math tells you that a $25,000 car paid over 48 months cost $521
per month -- before interest, taxes, fees and negative equity.
The ideal way for many people to
buy a car is to pay cash for a slightly used car and drive it for a
decade.
If you have caviar taste on a fish
sticks budget, buy used or lease a vehicle. While leasing is more
expensive than buying and holding, but it doesn't put you thousands of
dollars upside-down.
Read more:
http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/04/04/1561899/avoid-the-alluring-pitfalls-of.html#ixzz0kKPYf1VY
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