Re: Best car deal in 2009?
While I do believe car prices will prob. come down, I don't necessarily think great financing will be coming back (at least for some companies). I bought a new Buick this past summer, 0% 6 years. I recently went in to check if a minor issue needed to be fixed (recall-it wasn't a problem on my vehicle though). I hate 6 years . . . but @ 0% . . . I've got all the money in the bank earning 4% interest . . . Dealer said the best financing available for stellar credit (750+) is 5%.
I'm curious how far prices will fall. With GM now at the trough, do they have to drop prices as far as they should have? You could essentially have a 30s style food program, pay GM to build vehicles that just sit and rot since they don't have to drop the price.
So if you were buying with cash, buying later with cash is prob. better. If you are buying with financing . . . that's were you'd really have to have a price collapse (i.e. what's happened with trucks and SUVs has to happen across the board) for it to matter.
While I do believe car prices will prob. come down, I don't necessarily think great financing will be coming back (at least for some companies). I bought a new Buick this past summer, 0% 6 years. I recently went in to check if a minor issue needed to be fixed (recall-it wasn't a problem on my vehicle though). I hate 6 years . . . but @ 0% . . . I've got all the money in the bank earning 4% interest . . . Dealer said the best financing available for stellar credit (750+) is 5%.
I'm curious how far prices will fall. With GM now at the trough, do they have to drop prices as far as they should have? You could essentially have a 30s style food program, pay GM to build vehicles that just sit and rot since they don't have to drop the price.
So if you were buying with cash, buying later with cash is prob. better. If you are buying with financing . . . that's were you'd really have to have a price collapse (i.e. what's happened with trucks and SUVs has to happen across the board) for it to matter.
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