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#11
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![]() "Colin Kingsbury" wrote in message news:M_CKb.28510 Well I disagree. I look at interest as an insurance payment for keeping my cash liquid in the bank rather than tied up in an asset. A slowly-depreciating asset like an airplane or a car is a totally reasonable thing to finance. My airplane is not depreciating at all. A (new) car has a rather rapid depreciation. There are a lot of people out there that never get positive equity in a car. |
#12
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I agree with TripFarmer, partnership is the way to go. Personally, I
purchased a 1/5th share before I even started my flight training, and it turned out great. My cost for the share was $8000, and my hourly cost is roughly $50 on a '64 cherokee. This is not including the yearly annual, insurance or any repairs, which incidentally is split 5 ways, but still! Therefore, my advice is: 1. Look in the used market 2. Either start a partnership with a bunch of pilots looking to own a plane at your airport, or look to buy out someones' share. I also agree somewhat with some of the other posts. Flying is an expensive activity, and you will need quite a bit of cash to get to commercial standards; even if you own a plane (old or new). So you would be wise to have some money set aside for emergencies and repairs. I hope this helps. Keep flying JS "TripFarmer" wrote in message ... Partnership with one or two people. Sharing the costs is nice and you, nor they, can fly every day. Trip In article , says... I am a curently a comericial student that is looking to buy a light single to build time in and for the short family flights. I am having a problem finding financing due to a lack of a large down payment (due to school cost). Is there an easy way to buy or am I just S.O.L. untill I get the down payment???? Please help.... Thank You *** Sent via http://www.automationtools.com *** Add a newsgroup interface to your website today. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#13
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![]() "Ron Natalie" wrote in message m... My airplane is not depreciating at all. If you factor in ownership costs I doubt anyone ever makes money owning a plane. On the other hand quite a few people use the plane for many years and sell it for close to what they paid for it, perhaps even coming out a little ahead. In this regard they are vastly superior to boats or sports cars which easily depreciate in the teens. A (new) car has a rather rapid depreciation. A new anything has rapid depreciation. There is a huge difference in the market between "brand new" and "1 day old." It can easily be larger than the difference between 3 and 4 years old. There are a lot of people out there that never get positive equity in a car. The first few years everything is against you- rapid depreciation times compound interest pretty much buries you. But if you buy a car that has good resale value on a 5-year loan, the lines should start to cross after 3 years or so. Of course if you buy a Ford/GM/Chevy and the manufacturers are offering 0% financing and gazillion-dollar rebates then you're going to be SOL for a while. Where most people screw up is they buy a cheap car that depreciates fast and feels and looks old after 2-3 years, then they go out and get a new one. If you buy a nice car up front, it won't only hold its value longer, you won't feel so pressed to dump it. -cwk. -cwk. |
#14
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![]() "Colin Kingsbury" wrote in message hlink.net... "Ron Natalie" wrote in message m... My airplane is not depreciating at all. If you factor in ownership costs I doubt anyone ever makes money owning a plane. I never said it was making money... appreciation/depreciation is a capital issue. The first few years everything is against you- rapid depreciation times compound interest pretty much buries you. You better stop dealing with the loan sharks. I've never had a compound interest car loan. |
#15
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If you get a 3 year loan, the lines definitely should cross after 3 years...
If they don't you've bought a bit of a loser. Paul "Colin Kingsbury" wrote in message hlink.net... But if you buy a car that has good resale value on a 5-year loan, the lines should start to cross after 3 years or so. |
#16
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![]() "Colin Kingsbury" wrote in message news:CeHKb.28861]' But if you buy a car that has good resale value on a 5-year loan, the lines should start to cross after 3 years or so. Correct, and many people trade up before they reach that point. Consider also the leases and the GM so-called "Smart Loan". Essentially these things have balloons that approximate the value of the car at the end of the term. Of course if you buy a Ford/GM/Chevy and the manufacturers are offering 0% financing and gazillion-dollar rebates then you're going to be SOL for a while ??? A lower interest rate, or a decreased acquisition cost is going to help, not hinder. |
#17
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I agree. If you can't afford to buy it in cash, you're courting trouble
when the inevitable "oh, ****" repair happens. I disagree. I borrowed because the money was cheap and also because it is home equity, therefore deductible. I will not be grounded because of money. Please note: I did not say "Don't take a loan". I said "if you can't afford to buy it with cash, you're courting trouble". I took out a loan AND I could afford to buy it with cash, for the precise reasons you (and others) stated. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" "Newps" wrote in message news:K3AKb.300117$_M.1713611@attbi_s54... Jay Honeck wrote: I'll probably catch some flak for this, but I think if you buy a light airplane you should be *able* to buy it for cash, and then you should get a loan because the cost of money is so low right now. If you get a loan because you *need* it (on anything other than brand new) you're not going to be able to fly and maintain it. |
#18
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"Ron Natalie" wrote in message
m... "Colin Kingsbury" wrote in message news:CeHKb.28861]' Of course if you buy a Ford/GM/Chevy and the manufacturers are offering 0% financing and gazillion-dollar rebates then you're going to be SOL for a while ??? A lower interest rate, or a decreased acquisition cost is going to help, not hinder. It helps you when you're buying a car but it hurts you when you're trading it in. When I bought my Jeep in 1/2001 the dealers were selling for $300 over invoice (including "marketing fees" and all that other crap) with a 3/36 warranty and financing at 7.9%. Two years later the same guys were offering them for invoice or less with a 7/70 warranty and 0% financing. If you figure that the term of a used car loan is (should be) shorter (say 2-3 years versus 5) than for a new car and that used car loans have higher rates, you get a situation where buying a new car costs only a little more than a used one. Used car values have a lot to do with the cost of buying the equivalent car new. This is causing some trouble with companies that wrote 2-3 year leases on cars sold 1999-2001 that have, in today's market, very high residuals. I had one dealer with a ridiculously high (15-20% high ) asking price tell me, "Well, that's what we had to pay to close out the lease, so that's what we need to sell it for." Then I told him, "Well OK then, this is what I owe on my loan, so I'm not selling for any less than that, " and he said "No one will ever give you that." Talk about cognitive dissonance. Playing mind games with stupid people is one of my guilty pleasures. -cwk. -cwk. |
#19
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In article k.net,
Colin Kingsbury wrote: "Well, that's what we had to pay to close out the lease, so that's what we need to sell it for." Then I told him, "Well OK then, this is what I owe on my loan, so I'm not selling for any less than that, " and he said "No one will ever give you that." Talk about cognitive dissonance. Playing mind games with stupid people is one of my guilty pleasures. I bought a relatively inexpensive car for cash a few years ago, with a trade-in that I figured was worth about nothing (I traded it in so they'd have to deal with it -- it wasn't worth making it pass DEQ). The sales drone refused to work in units of 'price', instead wanting to talk in terms of monthly payments taking into account the trade-in value. When he tried to bait'n'switch me AND give me 'final offer' pressure all at once I immediately realized he wasn't asking enough and accepted. You could have knocked him over with a feather, since I'd been pretty obstinate up to that point. The sales manager really treated me like crap after that, miffed that he couldn't screw me on the trade-in AND there was no loan revenue AND he'd sold a new car model off someone else's lot for a few hundred over invoice. -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
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