LolYeah, we know, unfortunate and discussed at length above, read up
End of the working day now chaps, nice convo.
LolYeah, we know, unfortunate and discussed at length above, read up
End of the working day now chaps, nice convo.
If this is a 2 year buy, get bored sell kinda scenario then its basically a rental and little point throwing large deposits into it and building some kind of equity is pretty pointless. If this is car your keeping long term then you need to build equity as fast as you can
Just jumping onto this as I recently re-financed my car with oracle for 5.6% which after trying a few brokers was the best deal I could get..... I tried the usual suspects of tescos et al but they seem to rarely provide the headline rate. Before you ask my credit file is stellar. I just think theres a major difference between what the advert says and what you will end up with, and thats before you consider VT, balloons, monthlies etc etc.
I think when buying any car, used or not; consider seriously how long you will keep it and go from there. If this is a 2 year buy, get bored sell kinda scenario then its basically a rental and little point throwing large deposits into it and building some kind of equity is pretty pointless. If this is car your keeping long term then you need to build equity as fast as you can. Low APR, Low balloon/No balloon is the answer.
Like some of the others on here, dont like mixing up the boxes of roof over head and discretionary purchases......
I'll bow out of this as this will just be a circle of yesterday.
"The rate is bad, use your house as security and it will be much cheaper, as it is a secure asset"
"I dont want to use my house i'd rather pay more"
"You really should unless you genuinely think default is a possibility"
"This is the best rate that i can get secured against this asset"
"so dont use that asset"
Round and round What does it matter what people do, all you can do is advise them that really they could save some money if they did structure it in a better way
You forgot the part where using the house/equity isn't an option for everyone.I'll bow out of this as this will just be a circle of yesterday.
"The rate is bad, use a house as security and it will be much cheaper, as it is a secure asset"
"I dont want to use my house i'd rather pay more"
"You really should unless you genuinely think default is a possibility"
"This is the best rate that i can get secured against this asset"
"so dont use that asset"
Round and round What does it matter what people do, all you can do is advise them that really they could save some money if they did structure it in a better way
You forgot the part where using the house/equity isn't an option for everyone.
The negative attitude towards finance on here is insane here sometimes, fair enough if it's not for you but no need to get all high and mighty about it and smite others for it, arguing that you're right and other people are wrong. Horses for courses, and all...
People are living in some uptopian world where they are buying cars which appreciate in value, financed through a company to offset tax.
The negative attitude towards finance on here is insane here sometimes, fair enough if it's not for you but no need to get all high and mighty about it and smite others for it, arguing that you're right and other people are wrong. Horses for courses, and all...
I don't think a single person has said that other than Theophany who to be fair wasn't advocating that as a suggested option.
Not horses for courses at all, or any arguing involved, just plain facts and guidance which does not lead the requester down the unnecessarily expensive path of a poor financial product. It actually was an option in the context of this discussion.You forgot the part where using the house/equity isn't an option for everyone.
The negative attitude towards finance on here is insane here sometimes, fair enough if it's not for you but no need to get all high and mighty about it and smite others for it, arguing that you're right and other people are wrong. Horses for courses, and all...
This, people have generally been idiots on here over the years and had a daft attitude towards anyone who even dare ask about finance. Some of the comments in the last few pages are just baffling.
I've been trying to avoid saying it but I'm just going to come out and say it
People PCP because its the only way they can drive the car they want. It's that simple.
yeah it’s painful when you see it on paperOut of curiosity, if you were aiming to ultimately purchase on a £38,000 car on a 7.7% PCP, £5k down, over 4yrs as was originally posted, plugging those numbers into a 'total cost' calculator suggests you'd be paying £9,000 in interest, a total cost of £47,000 for that £38,000 car. Is that right? I knew you got stung but damn that's a lot of money for 'nothing'.