Throckmorton
Lifer
- Aug 23, 2007
- 16,829
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Shipping to the west coast is about $1000... Maybe you should buy a car you really want, and just ship it back when you leave
You also missed his point about your schemes, though. It's true, you come up with the most bizarre ideas. It's why there will be few/no people in this thread who tell you that leasing a car for 4 months is anything but a terrible idea.I'm not subletting the car... subletting =/= lease transfer.
Good job on missing the entire point.
He'll never pay only $1000 in lost money leasing a car over 4 months, no way in hell. He'll pay at least that alone when he signs the lease in tax, tag, title, doc fees, then the immediate hit in depreciation, and then at the end of the lease trying to find somebody to take it over.You'd only be losing about 1000-1500 on your stay there, but then you'd sell it off to the other guy, and you'd make back that money.
I'm not subletting the car... subletting =/= lease transfer.
Good job on missing the entire point.
I didn't miss the whole point. Sometimes even transferring a lease does not completely remove the original lessee from the transaction.
Leases are typically front loaded with the "driving it off the lot devaluation." A lease transfer is treated just like a sale. The next person is assuming a used on lease vehicle at the cost of a new one. Most people wouldn't bite on that because they would be paying "new car" premium on something used and won't want to assume the financial losses. You will get stuck paying the devaluation at the end.
That old forester would be a cool car to have for a few months and I'm sure you could resell that for most of your money back. Very useful vehicle.
Thats what I was thinking. He makes it sound like getting someone to take up the lease is as easy as posting it to CL and having an offer the next day. I just don't see it.
Best idea is to set up something with a dealership for a short-term borrow type of deal. Being Hawaii, I can't imagine it would be that odd to them for someone to propose that sort of deal.
I'm pretty sure that over a span of 5 months I would have better uses for $8500.
Yeah but that is what a place like Avis is for. Long term (ie more than 2 week) rentals. Most dealerships wouldn't want to eat the loss on short leases without one heck of monthly payment. Cars seem to lose right around 15-20% just driving them off the lot. On a $20k car that is an immediate $4k drop. Then start to roll in wear and tear. So in a 4 month lease of a new car, the dealer would need to roll the 4k loss in to those 4 months likely making the lease in excess of 1k / month so when they resell it they break even.
There's no way you'd find a better return on your money. If you you think so you're bad at math.
Let's say you buy a car for $8500. You drive it for 4 months, then need to resell it. Unfortunately you can only get $8000 when you sell it. Total cost of car: $500 + some charges for getting a title and things.
Now let's say you lease a car. You get lucky, find a zero down lease for $200 a month and you lease the car for 4 months. You go to sell it when you leave. You get really lucky and the car can be sold for its residual or you find somebody willing to take over the lease. Total cost of car: $800 + some other charges
That scenario with the lease is if everything works well and you get lucky, yet it still will end up costing you more. There's no way you can get $8500 to give you a guaranteed return of a few hundred dollars over the course of 4 months right now so you're deluding yourself by saying there's better uses for your money.
Yeah but that is what a place like Avis is for. Long term (ie more than 2 week) rentals. Most dealerships wouldn't want to eat the loss on short leases without one heck of monthly payment. Cars seem to lose right around 15-20% just driving them off the lot. On a $20k car that is an immediate $4k drop. Then start to roll in wear and tear. So in a 4 month lease of a new car, the dealer would need to roll the 4k loss in to those 4 months likely making the lease in excess of 1k / month so when they resell it they break even.
I run a business. An expenditure of $8500 into equipment and infrastructure can easily translate into a few hundreds dollars over 4 months + principle. In fact, it'd better give me that kind of return.
Right, because the new lessee defaulting effects me how exactly? A lease transfer is a transfer of equity.
I buy a car valued at KBB $10,000 that I could normally lease for $300/month.
Great. I manage to buy that car at $8500 maybe from a person who's leaving the island and needs it sold. During that 5 months that's $8,500 that I no longer have to use and to have work for me. Versus if I paid only $300/month for it. At the end of my stay I'm not going to be keeping the car anyway.
Yes, you purchase it for the residual value. Sometimes the residual value is actually higher or comparable to the price of other equivalent used cars.