Acura TSX within my means to purchase?

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ones3k

Banned
Aug 21, 2005
444
0
0
Originally posted by: AgaBoogaBoo
Originally posted by: GrammatonJP
Originally posted by: AgaBoogaBoo
Go with option B and save your money, you can do much more with it that will impact your future. Make sure to properly invest it and you'll come out ahead of the crowd down the road.
I would go with B and put some 401k money away.. your company have flexable spending ? put some in that too.. lower your tax rate if possible..
Agreed, get started on things like a 401k plan as soon as possible. The sooner you start the better.

Edit: lol, I've made 4 or 5 posts in this thread already, I'll give it a rest but keep what I said in mind ;)


My company matches 401k up to 3000 yearly. I was thinking to put in 3k yearly, have the company match that, for a net of 6k investment yearly. Should i be putting more into my 401k?
 

Viper GTS

Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
38,107
433
136
Originally posted by: ones3k
Originally posted by: AgaBoogaBoo
Originally posted by: GrammatonJP
Originally posted by: AgaBoogaBoo
Go with option B and save your money, you can do much more with it that will impact your future. Make sure to properly invest it and you'll come out ahead of the crowd down the road.
I would go with B and put some 401k money away.. your company have flexable spending ? put some in that too.. lower your tax rate if possible..
Agreed, get started on things like a 401k plan as soon as possible. The sooner you start the better.

Edit: lol, I've made 4 or 5 posts in this thread already, I'll give it a rest but keep what I said in mind ;)


My company matches 401k up to 3000 yearly. I was thinking to put in 3k yearly, have the company match that, for a net of 6k investment yearly. Should i be putting more into my 401k?

At a minimum you should be maxing out your 401k matching + Roth IRA, in that order.

My personal rule is 10% of my yearly income for a vehicle, I've never had a car payment & don't plan on having one any time soon.

Buying a $30K car right now would be a horrible financial decision.

Viper GTS
 

CTrain

Diamond Member
Sep 26, 2001
4,940
0
0
I'm against the norm.
You're young, its your first real job, you have no debt.....buy a car that you will really enjoy for the long run.

With that said, why not buy a yr old/2 yr old TSX ??
Still looks brand new and you can surely get one for ~$24K or less.
 

LegendKiller

Lifer
Mar 5, 2001
18,256
68
86
Originally posted by: ones3k
My company matches 401k up to 3000 yearly. I was thinking to put in 3k yearly, have the company match that, for a net of 6k investment yearly. Should i be putting more into my 401k?

Personally, match the 3k and shove more into an index/ exchange trade fund of your choice. You can get 90% of the value of mutual funds out of ETF's at a fraction of the cost.

I am not a huge fan of mutual funds, unless the manager has a very good 10+ year record and charges a low rate.

Some would say to max our your 401k to get the tax benefit. I do and sometimes do not agree with that.

401k is nice because you dont pay any tax on the saved amount. It sucks because it's locked into a limited choice set forever, which is usually based off of mutual funds. They are nice because it gets you to save, tax free.

Do what you think is correct in regards to investing. If you want to have some more guidance I can give you some advice, but I'd need to know a bit more. I do not work for edward jones or anything like that, but the primary thrust of my job (and education) is capital markets.

 

Jzero

Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
18,834
1
0
A lot happens to you during the stage of life. Why leverage yourself so far? I would get something cheaper and save my pennies for a house.

Do you have a working car right now? Definitely keep that. Not as much fun, but after losing 2 cars, I've come to the conclusion that something as volatile as metal on wheels is not worth any significant financial or emotional investment.
 

Strk

Lifer
Nov 23, 2003
10,197
4
76
Originally posted by: CTrain
I'm against the norm.
You're young, its your first real job, you have no debt.....buy a car that you will really enjoy for the long run.

With that said, why not buy a yr old/2 yr old TSX ??
Still looks brand new and you can surely get one for ~$24K or less.

Yeah, that's the one thing I can't get over. Why new? Has Acura changed anything on the TSX since it was first launched?
 

mugs

Lifer
Apr 29, 2003
48,920
46
91
Originally posted by: Strk
Originally posted by: CTrain
I'm against the norm.
You're young, its your first real job, you have no debt.....buy a car that you will really enjoy for the long run.

With that said, why not buy a yr old/2 yr old TSX ??
Still looks brand new and you can surely get one for ~$24K or less.

Yeah, that's the one thing I can't get over. Why new? Has Acura changed anything on the TSX since it was first launched?

I think only the 2006s have Bluetooth.

Or maybe that just comes with the navigation package.
 

GrammatonJP

Golden Member
Feb 16, 2006
1,245
0
0
Plug in your numbers here

http://www.bloomberg.com/analysis/calculators/401k.html#results

1 65,000.00 3,000.00 3,000.00 6,266.46
2 65,650.00 3,030.00 3,030.00 13,115.70
3 66,306.50 3,060.30 3,060.30 20,596.72


Assuming the worse, 1% salary increase per year, at the end of 3 year, u saved 20.5k with matching at 3k year. Assume a 8% rate of return


If you put in 6.5k / 10%, at the same time, end of 3 year, you saved 44.6k.
1 65,000.00 6,500.00 6,500.00 13,577.34
2 65,650.00 6,565.00 6,565.00 28,417.36
3 66,306.50 6,630.65 6,630.65 44,626.22

20.5k vs 44.6k. going up from 3k to 6.5k. Assume the same 8% return per year.

Rate of return depends on market condition but I rather have money at the end when I retire or if i retire early... dont count on SS
 

LegendKiller

Lifer
Mar 5, 2001
18,256
68
86
Originally posted by: CTrain
I'm against the norm.
You're young, its your first real job, you have no debt.....buy a car that you will really enjoy for the long run.

With that said, why not buy a yr old/2 yr old TSX ??
Still looks brand new and you can surely get one for ~$24K or less.

Lets look at this from a practical standpoint. By the time he is 32, he will have 18,619 just from the $150/mo he saved by not buying that car. Assuming 8% asset appreciation, 150/mo saved, and $200/yr saved in insurance. By the time he is 42 that comes out to 40,00. In 40 years, that comes to 187,000. So, by saving 10,000 when he is 22, he will have almost 200,000 when he retires. Or, if he decides to have kids somewhere in there, his financial decision to save 2k a year for 5 years will be enough to pay for their education. Change that asset return to 10% and he has 377,450. Pretty damn impressive for only 10k.

Furthermore, he needs to have a cushion. If he lost his job, then what? Everybody should have at least 6 monts "rainy day" salary, if not a full year.

After I got my new job 3 months ago I was going to buy a G35c. Why? Because my salary has tripled in 3 years and I could afford it. However, then my wife was diagnosed with thyroid cancer and she took 3 months off of work. She took 3 months off of work and we could afford it because I made a good decision to NOT be young and impulsive (I am 27, she is 26). We have 1 car, I rideshare with a coworker.

People in this country just don't get fiscal responsibility.
 

GrammatonJP

Golden Member
Feb 16, 2006
1,245
0
0
Originally posted by: mugs

Yeah, that's the one thing I can't get over. Why new? Has Acura changed anything on the TSX since it was first launched?

I think only the 2006s have Bluetooth.

Or maybe that just comes with the navigation package.[/quote]

yeah thats only for navi

2006 has 15 more HP, 5 if SAE corrected
64mm throttle body vs 60mm
ipod hook up
the bumper looks slightly different
using hondata, more hp & torque than 04/05
better instrument cluster

some misc stuff.
 

DBL

Platinum Member
Mar 23, 2001
2,637
0
0
Originally posted by: LegendKiller
If I were in your position I would not buy a TSX, unless it was used and pre-certified or get a much cheaper car.

For people saying buy a place, that is about the worst thing you can do at this point. The housing market *IS* going down, places in Boston have already lost 40% of their value. Here in VA outside of DC the average depreciation is 10%, so far. If he goes and buys a place he will be flipped on it within the next 3 years.
As opposed to a car loan, which puts you upside down the moment you drive the car off the lot? Besides, he would have to save in order to purchase, which means his real estate market timing could be very good.


It sounds like you are just out of college and got a pretty nice job. Your position is enviable to many.

Here is what I would do...

1. Check to see if your employer has a 401k program. Shove the max matched amount into it if they do.

2. If your company is public, see if they have a stock purchase program. Put 3% or so of your salary into it. Every 6 months sell it and purchase an index fund, say a Spider or something similar.

If you buy a cheaper car, you could probably save what? 150? Thats 1,800/yr. Not to mention cheaper insurance costs. Make it 2k a year. In 5 years, the term of the loan, you will have saved $10k, not have paid somebody 6%+ interest, AND you will have made your own money.

Essentially you will be up probably 13k, which includes interest saved, insurance saved, and less payments.


Unless you got gobs of money, buying an expensive car at your age is a stupid purchase. Buying a house is even worse, especially considering you will probably want to switch jobs within the next 5 years.

Use that cash, in 5 years, to pay for grad school or something.

Buying a house or apartment is rarely a poor decision provided you purchase something within your means. Rates have gone up so prices have slid a bit. Either way, so what? Save a down payment and buy a place for 5-8 years and build up some equity. If prices happen to go down, that will make your next upgrade more affordable. Essentially, it would be a wash.

Regardless, it's hard to imagine a scenario where renting an apartment and purchasing a new car (even a more affordable one) is a better choice over saving for and purchasing a house.

Also, besides the mortgage tax deductions, realize that a typical mortgage will net you probably close to 7% in equity over 5 years.
 

Injury

Lifer
Jul 19, 2004
13,066
2
81
Call up insurance companies, tell them you are looking into buying this car and ask what their rates would be.

That should factor in a lot. That could end up being an extra $200/mo... likely not that high, but if your record isn't clean it could be.

Personally, I would wait until you have a bigger down payment. 5 years is a long time to go on a loan, and with a ~500/mo payment, it's not too likely that you'll be paying it off ooo early.
 

ones3k

Banned
Aug 21, 2005
444
0
0
Okay, so, i still need to decide on a car to purchase... I need to be able to get to work 8)

Any ideas?
 

KentState

Diamond Member
Oct 19, 2001
8,397
393
126
If you are putting money into your 401k without issue and this car wouldn't limit your savings or ability to enjoy life, then go for it. The worse thing in life is to have all of your money going into one thing and missing out on life because you don't have the resources to enjoy it.
 

sciencewhiz

Diamond Member
Jun 30, 2000
5,885
8
81
If you have a car you can drive now, you should spend 3-6 months building an emergency savings account and saving for a real down payment. That time period gives you a chance to figure out what your real expenses are.
 

Excelsior

Lifer
May 30, 2002
19,047
18
81
Originally posted by: Viper GTS
Originally posted by: ones3k
Originally posted by: AgaBoogaBoo
Originally posted by: GrammatonJP
Originally posted by: AgaBoogaBoo
Go with option B and save your money, you can do much more with it that will impact your future. Make sure to properly invest it and you'll come out ahead of the crowd down the road.
I would go with B and put some 401k money away.. your company have flexable spending ? put some in that too.. lower your tax rate if possible..
Agreed, get started on things like a 401k plan as soon as possible. The sooner you start the better.

Edit: lol, I've made 4 or 5 posts in this thread already, I'll give it a rest but keep what I said in mind ;)


My company matches 401k up to 3000 yearly. I was thinking to put in 3k yearly, have the company match that, for a net of 6k investment yearly. Should i be putting more into my 401k?

At a minimum you should be maxing out your 401k matching + Roth IRA, in that order.

My personal rule is 10% of my yearly income for a vehicle, I've never had a car payment & don't plan on having one any time soon.

Buying a $30K car right now would be a horrible financial decision.

Viper GTS

In-fvcking-deed.
 

LegendKiller

Lifer
Mar 5, 2001
18,256
68
86
Originally posted by: DBL
Originally posted by: LegendKiller
If I were in your position I would not buy a TSX, unless it was used and pre-certified or get a much cheaper car.

For people saying buy a place, that is about the worst thing you can do at this point. The housing market *IS* going down, places in Boston have already lost 40% of their value. Here in VA outside of DC the average depreciation is 10%, so far. If he goes and buys a place he will be flipped on it within the next 3 years.
As opposed to a car loan, which puts you upside down the moment you drive the car off the lot? Besides, he would have to save in order to purchase, which means his real estate market timing could be very good.


It sounds like you are just out of college and got a pretty nice job. Your position is enviable to many.

Here is what I would do...

1. Check to see if your employer has a 401k program. Shove the max matched amount into it if they do.

2. If your company is public, see if they have a stock purchase program. Put 3% or so of your salary into it. Every 6 months sell it and purchase an index fund, say a Spider or something similar.

If you buy a cheaper car, you could probably save what? 150? Thats 1,800/yr. Not to mention cheaper insurance costs. Make it 2k a year. In 5 years, the term of the loan, you will have saved $10k, not have paid somebody 6%+ interest, AND you will have made your own money.

Essentially you will be up probably 13k, which includes interest saved, insurance saved, and less payments.


Unless you got gobs of money, buying an expensive car at your age is a stupid purchase. Buying a house is even worse, especially considering you will probably want to switch jobs within the next 5 years.

Use that cash, in 5 years, to pay for grad school or something.

Buying a house or apartment is rarely a poor decision provided you purchase something within your means. Rates have gone up so prices have slid a bit. Either way, so what? Save a down payment and buy a place for 5-8 years and build up some equity. If prices happen to go down, that will make your next upgrade more affordable. Essentially, it would be a wash.

Regardless, it's hard to imagine a scenario where renting an apartment and purchasing a new car (even a more affordable one) is a better choice over saving for and purchasing a house.

Also, besides the mortgage tax deductions, realize that a typical mortgage will net you probably close to 10% in equity over 5 years.


I don't believe you fully appreciate the market we are in. I work in the captial markets, and I do appreciate the situation. Lets run down the past 10 years.

1. Housing prices have gone up more than 50%, inflation adjusted, in the past 10 years, according to some of the best financial researchers.

2. The housing market, adjusted for inflation, went up 20% from 1890 to 1995. So, in 1/10th the time, the market appreciated 2.5x as much. That means we have deviated from the mean by a huge amount. What happened to the last deviation from the mean (99/00 anybody?). When it comes down to it, there are two ways you can regress to the mean, stay even or go down. If we stayed even, houses wouldn't appreciate for more than 100 years. So we gotta go down!

3. Since 1995, personal debt has more than doubled

4. More than 1 TRILLION dollars of hybrid mortgages are going to become unlocked in the next 3 years. That means that ARMs expire, and IO unlocked. This means that for many people, payments are going to go up 30%+.

5. Once the slowdown starts (it has) people will try to unload overstocked inventory at lower prices (they are now), developers will be left holding the bag (10k's (annual financial statements) from major housing developers show huge cancelled orders and larger inventories). They will then drop the price to get rid of excess inventory (they are doing so now). THis in turn squeezes speculators and investors, as it is happening now.

Since the prices will level off, many people who took IO or ARM mortgages to "squeeze" into their houses, or keep them just for appreciation will be flipped. They will have 2 options, forclosure, or selling for a loss. Once they sell, prices will go down further.

The economy has been growing on debt, once the housing market pops, the economy stops growing as much and debt gets called.

If you look at your current area, the price of a place should only be 100-200x monthly rent. So, for my place, that means that it should cost, at most, 300k, my place (which I am renting) costs 475K. According to all analysis, the DC area is overpriced by 37%, which is, ironically, about the amount my placed is overpriced.

Assume that I spend 10k extra than a homeowner and I do so for 3 years (the term of my lease). Within those two years, if my place goes down more than 20k, then I have *SAVED* money. Consider the fact that it might go down 150k, that means I have made 130k over my landlord.

Ouch.


Don't believe me? Warren Buffet spoke of it last weekend. If you don't believe the Oracle of Omaha, and his uber-returns for the last few decades, than you are a loon. Fitch Ratings (It was either them, S&P, or Moody's) released a report that more than 40% of Apartment -> condos will go under in the next 5 years due to poor debt management, poor build quality (they are apartments), and other problems.

The mortgage industry and the realtors have kept pumping housing as the superior investment. Sorry, but it isn't.

People think realty is a safe bet, but it isn't. People think it always goes up, but it doesn't. People think it's a good return, but .3% inflation adjusted sucks, you are much better off going to the diversified market.

save your money. Don't be a miser, but don't be foolish.
 

LegendKiller

Lifer
Mar 5, 2001
18,256
68
86
Personally, I would just get a decent Civic or Accord, something under 20k. Drive it till you are 30. I know it seems like a long time, but by that time you should be making a good amount of money and have a nice bank account.

I'd love to go out and spend a crapload on a car too, I kinda hate ridesharing, its boring. However, sometimes you gotta delay gratification. Even when my wife goes back to work and pulls in more than she did before, I won't be getting a new car. What is the point? We can save more than 6g's a year, or I can have a toy. Personally, I'd rather delay and get something better in 5 years, when I start having kids and actually need some enjoyment in life...

 

Dunbar

Platinum Member
Feb 19, 2001
2,041
0
0
You say rent will be $5k-12k a year, that is a huge range. Can you narrow that number down some, it makes a big difference in your disposable income. Have you priced out insurance yet, you definitely need to know this number. Are you going to have to purchase furniture, TV, supplies etc. when you move? Do not underestimate the cost of moving and furnishing a new place.

I personally think if you want the TSX you should buy it, chances are you can afford it. But I would recommend you move into the apartment and track expenses for 4-6 months to figure out if you can truly afford the car. Even on a $65k/yr. salary a $700/mo. car payment (with insurance) is a lot of money.
 

jhayx7

Platinum Member
Oct 1, 2005
2,226
0
0
Originally posted by: ones3k
How much should i spend on a car?

My advice:

I am 22 and purchased my first car when I was 18 (new 2001 civic). I do not regret buying the civic, it has been a great car, but I DO regret buying it new. The moment you drive a new car off of the lot it takes a sharp depreciation drop in value. Shop around for a used (but newer) Accord or TSX even. Save up them pennies in a 401k like everyone else suggested, and save money each month for a down payment for a house. Renting is horrible! I have been renting ever since I moved out and it sickens me to think how much money I have thrown away ( 5 years x 12 months x $580 a month in rent = $34,800!!). Come back to the forum when you are ready to buy a house, it is the biggest headache you will ever have in your entire life.