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Rebates, Incentives, APRs - Questions & Comments

3978 messages,  Last post on Nov 30, 2009 at 9:19 AM

You are in the Smart Shopper Forum. Your Hosts are kirstie_h & tidester

What is this discussion about? Car Financing


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#3900 of 3978
Re: Early lease buyout offers - manuf.'s pocket or dealers? [kirstie_h] by joel0622
Aug 30, 2007 (12:08 pm)
Reply

Replying to: kirstie_h (Aug 30, 2007 12:04 pm)

It could be what are some times called conquest programs. There has been several occasions where ford has offered to pay the remaining 3 payments on a competitive make. Right now we have early bird offers going on where Ford will forgive up to the final 6 payments on a Ford Lease.
#3901 of 3978
Re: Early lease buyout offers - manuf.'s pocket or dealers? [joel0622] by kyfdx HOST
Aug 30, 2007 (12:22 pm)
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Replying to: joel0622 (Aug 30, 2007 12:08 pm)

I wouldn't bet on that with Toyota, though... They already have the most convoluted leasing program there is... (Well, along with Volvo).
 
I think our OP's inclinations are correct, as well.. Probably GM has a program, and the Toyota dealer's advertisement is just a come-on..
#3902 of 3978
Negotiating vehicle price before rebate by cali_driver
Oct 03, 2007 (9:29 pm)
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Currently there is a 1250 factory-to-consumer rebate on the car I am looking at. This just went up from the 700 rebate they were offering last month.
 
It seems that when the rebate goes up, so does the vehicle sale price!
Example: 700 rebate: price of car is 13,399 (after rebate). 1250 rebate: price of car is 13,459 (after rebate).
 
And what's the point of a rebate if I am still paying what others have paid without the rebate?
Example: I've seen people in my area getting the same car I want at around 14.9-15K OTD. I am getting a price of 14.8K OTD with the rebate.
 
So should I be negotiating the sale price down further so the rebate actually feels like I am getting a rebate. I mean, it's a factory-to-consumer rebate, so why am I not seeing the savings? Is the dealer still trying to pocket extra cash?
#3903 of 3978
Re: Negotiating vehicle price before rebate [cali_driver] by oldfarmer50
Oct 04, 2007 (3:37 pm)
Reply

Replying to: cali_driver (Oct 03, 2007 9:29 pm)

"...Is the dealer trying to pocket extra cash?..."
 
From what you've said it would seem so. That's an interesting question though. Barring any last minute price increase from the manufacturer, (which would be dumb if they have to offer rebates) I can't see any reason for that.
 
You don't say what year car you are looking at. If it's a 2007 they may be getting in short supply and thus command a higher price.
#3904 of 3978
Mercury Sable (Taurus) Rebates by jamesam
Oct 15, 2007 (2:42 pm)
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I had a Mercury dealer tell me yesterday that the current rebate is $1,500. But all I have found on the Internet is a $500 mfr to customer rebate?
Is there a mfr-dealer incetnive I dont know about?
 
(Looking to buy in Oct 2007)
#3905 of 3978
Re: Mercury Sable (Taurus) Rebates [jamesam] by joel0622
Oct 15, 2007 (5:16 pm)
Reply

Replying to: jamesam (Oct 15, 2007 2:42 pm)

I know ForD dealers have the "Swap Your Ride" incentive going on. its an extra $1000 rebate to support the marketing campaign. You may or may not have seen the commercials on TV. Don't know if it crosses over to LM or not.
#3906 of 3978
OK explain this... by oldfarmer50
Jan 23, 2008 (3:46 pm)
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One car I'm looking at has a $1000 cash rebate or 0% financing for 5 years. Depending on the bank rate you use 0% can save you $3000 or $4000 in interest payments over even a credit union loan.
 
My question: Is there something I'm missing? Why would a manufacturer want to give you such a great financing deal but only a so-so cash back deal? I realize that the 0% only applies to top tier customers but still it makes me wonder. What's the catch?
#3907 of 3978
Re: OK explain this... [oldfarmer50] by joel0622
Jan 23, 2008 (4:09 pm)
Reply

Replying to: oldfarmer50 (Jan 23, 2008 3:46 pm)

If the rebate was $4000 then all you would do is take their rebate and go to your credit union. This way the captive gets to keep you, and even though it is a 0% loan studies show that people who finance with a captive are 41% more likely to return to that make auto again when they trade, and 28% more likely to return to the selling dealer.
 
Those numbers were accurate last year.
#3908 of 3978
Re: OK explain this... [joel0622] by oldfarmer50
Jan 23, 2008 (4:41 pm)
Reply

Replying to: joel0622 (Jan 23, 2008 4:09 pm)

"...41% more likely to return to that make..."
 
Could it really be as simple as a gambit to generate repeat customers? If I'm calculating correctly, the 0% deal is worth over $4000 vs. a $1000 cash rebate.
 
They must be looking for more than loyalty for 3 grand.
 
Is there a limit on the percentage of the purchase price you can finance? I mean could I finance 80-90% at this low rate?
 
How common are these types of deals? Maybe I should be looking around more. Say, joel0622, got any 0% deals on a Mustang GT?
#3909 of 3978
Re: OK explain this... [oldfarmer50] by joel0622
Jan 23, 2008 (4:47 pm)
Reply

Replying to: oldfarmer50 (Jan 23, 2008 4:41 pm)

Is there a limit on the percentage of the purchase price you can finance? I mean could I finance 80-90% at this low rate?
 
If your credit is good you could finance 140% that rate.
 
Also, rebates don't get peoples attention like they used to.
 
Sorry no 0% on the Mustang GT's. But I will put you on my list to call if it ever happens

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