mutanthands
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 1, 2021
- Threads
- 6
- Messages
- 436
- Reaction score
- 624
- Location
- N.Yorkshire
- Vehicles
- Taycan GTS, Suzuki Cara
It's easy to make money when you have money. Pretty universal!
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Never a truer word spoken and I will be stealing that line from you!It's cheap to be wealthy and expensive to be poor.
Interest expense on a car loan is not tax deductible (US tax law). Interest earned on a CD is taxable. Significant note.I was going to pay cash for new Taycan (about 165k) given recent interest rate increase. I was able to find rates from local credit union in low 3’s. Seems foolish not to take advantage of that. Recent money market in US yields about 3% and 2 year CD’s yielding around 5%. I was thinking of putting 50-70k down and investing rest into different investment “buckets”. I’ll probably keep this car 3-4 years. Anyone in similar situation? Thoughts? I know everyone’s situation is different but just seems foolish to dump all that cash in a car. I don’t “need” the cash per se, might be nice to have extra cash on hand![]()
It’s certainly the case that some Lease companies can buy in bulk, and pass on manufacturer’s discounts within their lease pricing.Does this conversation change much when looking at a loan vs a lease? When I brought up paying for the car in cash vs financed, my dealer was surprised and made the case for a lease being preferential because "the dealer is able to provide some incentives" when using a lease. I'm interested in owning the car outright so a lease isn't immediately appealing to me, but the response from the dealer has gotten me wondering now.
If you have a banker who will lend you money at 2% you should probably fire that banker - why lend you money if the bank could be making more than twice the profit on risk free bond investment? Either the banker is incompetent, or it's a scam (legal with fees raising the APR significantly, or illegal where you find yourself fleeced of the assets you leveraged). Perhaps you've heard this before, but in case you didn't - if something sounds too good to be true, it is too good to be true.Buddy if you don’t have a private banker giving you special rates on your assets you shouldn’t have a Taycan.
I don’t regret my decision, I financed 100% of it at 4% and now getting 5.25% on a money market account I put 150k cash in. More importantly I now have cash that’s easily accessible.Hey Marc,
Your financial dilemma from a year ago is still relevant, as these decisions can have long-term implications. It's great that you were considering the low-interest rates available for financing the Taycan and exploring investment opportunities for your cash.