BMW to limit U.S. Mini sales in 2003

NFS4

No Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
72,636
47
91
http://www.auto.com/industry/iwirg6_20021106.htm

BMW, which sold 18,606 Minis in the U.S. through October, has buyers for about 75 percent of the cars before they reach U.S. showrooms, Pitney said. The short supply contributes to an Automobile Lease Guide estimate that 2002 Minis will retain about 61 percent of their value after three years, the highest rate for any U.S. vehicle from the model year.

:Q:Q I'd like to see a fuggin' Neon SRT-4 do that sh!t :D
 

vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
62,484
8,345
126
Good god.

61%??????

Lemme look at this real quick. Assuming your bought a mini for $18,000 you'd be looking at about $7,000 in depreciation. So, you'd have to pay $7000/36 + interest and sales tax????

WOW.

 

N8Magic

Lifer
Dec 12, 2000
11,624
1
81
Originally posted by: vi_edit
Good god.

61%??????

Lemme look at this real quick. Assuming your bought a mini for $18,000 you'd be looking at about $7,000 in depreciation. So, you'd have to pay $7000/36 + interest and sales tax????

WOW.

I'll bet they don't give you that depreciation rate when you go to lease one. ;)
 

vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
62,484
8,345
126
The short supply contributes to an Automobile Lease Guide estimate that 2002 Minis will retain about 61 percent of their value after three years, the highest rate for any U.S. vehicle from the model year.

That IS the residual from the leases.
 

N8Magic

Lifer
Dec 12, 2000
11,624
1
81
Originally posted by: vi_edit
The short supply contributes to an Automobile Lease Guide estimate that 2002 Minis will retain about 61 percent of their value after three years, the highest rate for any U.S. vehicle from the model year.

That IS the residual from the leases.
Bah! :eek:
 

mithrandir2001

Diamond Member
May 1, 2001
6,545
1
0
Originally posted by: N8Magic
Originally posted by: vi_edit
Good god.

61%??????

Lemme look at this real quick. Assuming your bought a mini for $18,000 you'd be looking at about $7,000 in depreciation. So, you'd have to pay $7000/36 + interest and sales tax????

WOW.

I'll bet they don't give you that depreciation rate when you go to lease one. ;)
Yea, they'll say "high demand" requires them to charge you a high lease payment.

The 61% is probably off of MRSP, not actual retail value. So the dealer will start you off with a capitalized cost of MSRP + $3K or so. You can't win this game.