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  #21 (permalink)  
Old 05-14-2009, 07:08 AM
money blogger money blogger is offline
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Do not buy the car. If you put the money into an investment and let it compound you would be able to have many more fantastic cars in the future.

Do today what others won't so you can have tomorrow what others don't
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Old 05-14-2009, 05:31 PM
psuicyde king psuicyde king is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by boosami View Post
Buying that car is not going to put you in financial hardship. However, here is how I think of it...

If you had enough savings in your account to purchase that $45k car flat out, would you buy it? Or would it bother you to spend all that money on a car knowing you would have been almost as happy with a much less expensive one?

It is really easy to justify financing something you want because you don't have to front all the money. I've talked myself out of many superfluous purchases by looking at it like that.

If I'm willing to finance, but wouldn't be willing to buy flat out, it's not a good buy. I'm not trying to talk you out of it... I'm a single person and I own two expensive cars for personal use--both bought flat out--so I understand
This is a great perspective - I appreciate you sharing. The funny thing is last year I was in a similar boat looking at buying my motorcycle. $13,500 was the tag and I was bouncing back and forth. I bought it, and would have written a check for it flat out, except I got 2.9% - I think we'd all agree to finance at that rate and invest the rest. It a great decision, and I'm loving every single mile of it. That being said, 45 > 13 =D. As much as I want to enjoy now, I agree with the group that it's the best decision all around to wait.
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Old 05-15-2009, 06:54 PM
sandrark sandrark is offline
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This has been a great thread for me to read - I'm considering a similar decision. The difference is that I have a lot of cash to put down. As a result, my car payment on the remaining $15K will be ~ $345 a month or so.

I have a solid job, I have a written budget, I save ~ 20% of my gross salary, I have no debt other than the house mortgage, I have ~ 14 months of expenses in savings, and I have (supposedly) a pension as well. All signs are positive, yet I'm still delaying to sock away even more cash. I think I am the tightwad an earlier poster mentioned.

I agree with an earlier poster as well - having at least a 30% downpayment limits the risk you'll ever be upside down on a loan.

Sandi
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Old 05-16-2009, 10:44 PM
nancy2584 nancy2584 is offline
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If you buy the car,you will have too much pressure.
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Old 05-17-2009, 12:28 PM
Bimmer Bimmer is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by psuicyde king View Post
I'm going to try to hit my house goal early, then save and pay cash for whatever my new dream car is!
This is the big statement for me. You can buy your dream car now, but what happens when that new dream car comes along in a few years? You could trap yourself in a vicious cycle.

You can buy some fabulous cars for half the price of what you are looking at.
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  #26 (permalink)  
Old 05-18-2009, 02:35 PM
Runaway Finances Runaway Finances is offline
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Instead of making a car payment, make it to yourself. Set up a "car account" somewhere and make a payment to each each month. When you have built up enough money to buy the car you want, then buy it! But, you are paying CASH for the car.

What got our country in the financial mess that we're in is Americans buying what they wanted, when they wanted it, regardless whether they could afford it or not.

It's ridiculous how much we spend on cars, but as long as you pay cash for it and that purchase fits within your other financial goals, then more power to you.
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