Sign In Join 



BMW X5 Lease Questions

1108 messages,  Last post on Nov 22, 2009 at 6:35 PM

You are in the Prices Paid: Buying & Leasing Experiences Forum. Your Hosts are car_man & kyfdx

What is this discussion about? BMW X5, Car Leasing, SUV


Messages Page 82 of 112
1
...
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
...
112
Prev
Next
Last
Go To Msg #
Search This Discussion

#805 of 1108
Re: [pchera01] by Car_man HOST
Sep 05, 2008 (2:00 am)
Reply

Replying to: pchera01 (Sep 03, 2008 6:14 pm)

Hi pchera01. BMW Financial Services' new September buy rate lease money factors are .00200 for the 2008 X5 3.0 and .00175 for the X5 4.8.
 
Car_man
Host
Prices Paid: Buying & Leasing Experiences Forum
#806 of 1108
Re: [Car_man] by drewmisha
Sep 05, 2008 (7:50 am)
Reply

Replying to: Car_man (Sep 05, 2008 2:00 am)

Do you also happen to know what the residuals on a 2008 x5 4.8 for 12k/yr for 3 years? Thanks.
 
Andrew
#807 of 1108
Re:Good lease? [Car_man] by eaw801
Sep 07, 2008 (6:40 pm)
Reply

Replying to: Car_man (Sep 03, 2008 2:05 am)

X5 3.0 Has Premium,Cold Weather, Tech, Premium Sound,Sport,3rd Row, Rear ClimateControl,Heads Up Nav, Sirius, Ipod,Heated Rear Seats, and Running Boards. Also has app 14,000 miles but is guaranteed for 36,000 miles above whatever I take it at. Was Dealership's X5. MSRP $64,670. I pay $2169 down and 632 per month.
#808 of 1108
Wait till December 08? by dollar_pound
Sep 08, 2008 (10:39 am)
Reply
My X3 lease is up in Jan 09. I am interested in X5 3.0. Is it usually better to wait for deals till December or should i start looking now. I recently received email from BMW FS that I should start looking for options.
 
What are the current lease numbers for 12K miles, for 2 year/3 year....leases.
 
Thanks,
#809 of 1108
My calculations correct? by socal59
Sep 08, 2008 (4:36 pm)
Reply
So my 05 X5 lease will be up in Dec 08. According to my calculations, are these numbers correct for a new lease:
08 X5 3.0
only option, heated seats
msrp $47525
Net Cap Cost: $44500
MF: .0016 (returning loyalty rate)
Residual: .53
Monthly payment W/Ca 8.25% sales tax: $701.36
I used an Excel spreadsheet to run the numbers, does the monthly payment seem too high?
#810 of 1108
Re: My calculations correct? [socal59] by tidester HOST
Sep 08, 2008 (8:34 pm)
Reply

Replying to: socal59 (Sep 08, 2008 4:36 pm)

Try this: Calculate Your Own Lease Payment
 
tidester, host
SUVs and Smart Shopper
#811 of 1108
Re: Wait till December 08? [dollar_pound] by dollar_pound
Sep 09, 2008 (9:12 am)
Reply

Replying to: dollar_pound (Sep 08, 2008 10:39 am)

found the answer:
 
article from wsj
 
Sales Slump in Luxury-Car Segment
And Auto Makers Offer Deals
Luxury Brands Shun 'Cash Back' Rebates,
Offer Cut-Rate Financing to Draw Buyers
September 8, 2008; Page D8
 
Here's something you don't see every day: Factory sponsored low interest rate financing deals on new BMWs. But they're out there now, because even luxury brands are getting bounced around by a choppy economy.
 
Several major luxury brands, including BMW, Tata Motors Ltd.'s Land Rover, Daimler AG's Mercedes-Benz, Toyota Motor Corp's Lexus, Nissan Motor Co.'s Infiniti are promoting discounted leases or other price cutting deals to spur sales. These brands tend to shy away from crude, mass-market come-ons such as direct cash rebates or "employee pricing" offers. But the deals are there waiting for customers who start bargaining. In August, 63% of luxury vehicle sales involved some kind of cut-rate financing, compared to 43% a year earlier, according to data from the Power Information Network (PIN), which harvests transaction data from dealerships.
 
The average cash rebate offered by luxury brands in August was $3,240, up from $2,624 a year ago, PIN's surveys found. But a few brands went above and beyond. Land Rover's British-made SUVs went off lots in August with an average $7,016 cash rebate tucked into the glove box, according to PIN data. Land Rover's deals outdid Cadillac and Lincoln – which have tended to discount more heavily than European and Japanese brands. General Motors Corp.'s Cadillac brand offered cash rebates averaging $4,105 dollars a vehicle last month, up from $2,758 a vehicle the year before, according to PIN.
JOIN THE DISCUSSION
  
Readers, over to you: Do you think more deals will boost sales of luxury vehicles?Join a discussion1.
 
Discounts in the luxury vehicle segment are seasonal and cyclical. They tend to be richest in the fall, when car makers launch their new models, and in the dead of winter -- December and January, according to data from Edmunds.com2, which tracks the ebb and flow of incentives. The cyclical part has to do with the auto makers' product timing. When important model lines get old, the discounts rise.
 
Minor ups and downs in the economy tend to have less impact on luxury car demand, because affluent consumers usually ride out those dips without much real damage to their financial profiles. But if the storm gets violent enough, even well-to-do people will rethink whether it's absolutely essential to trade in a perfectly good car.
 
That's happening now. The coinciding crunches in the real-estate market and in the finance industry apparently have prompted difficult discussions around kitchen tables even in homes with granite countertops.
 
Sales in the "lower luxury" car segment, which includes the BMW 3-Series, Acura TL, Infiniti G35 and Lexus ES and IS models, are down 10.3% for the year through Aug. 31, according to Autodata figures. That's almost five times worse than the 2.1% decline for passenger car sales overall. Total luxury car sales are down 14.2% for the first eight months of 2008. Luxury sport-utility vehicle sales are down nearly 18% for the year so far -- a decline that understates the accompanying impact on car makers' profits.
 
At BMW, the company's U.S. marketing arm has extended its low interest rate financing offers on 2008 models to the end of October, though the deals on certain models aren't as generous as in August. Still, if you qualify, you can get a 0.9% loan on a 335i sedan, or a free automatic transmission.
 
One of BMW's goals in promoting low-rate financing deals is to encourage more customers to buy, rather than lease, says BMW spokesman Jan Ehlen. BMW has tended to lease about 60% of its cars. Now, the company wants closer to a 50-50 ratio, Mr. Ehlen says.
 
Leasing has been causing heartburn across the car industry. Too many vehicles -- particularly leased sport-utility vehicles -- leased three years ago when gas was still relatively cheap and the economy was relatively strong are coming back to dealerships worth thousands less than the finance companies had bet when the deals were written. That's translated into huge losses for car makers' lending arms and for the banks and independent finance companies that underwrote leases in the past. Many financial institutions are pulling back from auto leasing, as part of a broader credit retrenchment.
 
Discounts for several major luxury brands may have peaked in July, when gas prices hit new highs and overall new vehicle demand plunged, says Jesse Toprak, executive director for industry analysis at Edmunds. Now, some of the deals are less generous, he says. But pressure will likely continue for the luxury makes, particularly when it comes to the lower ends of their model ranges. A lot of upper middle-class families stretched to buy $35,000 or $40,000 BMWs and Mercedes-Benz C-Class models when times were good.
 
Now, says Mr. Toprak, "they're thinking twice."
 
The current crop of luxury car promotions will dwindle as new models arrive this fall, many equipped with higher sticker prices. BMW has already signaled prices for its vehicles will rise an average of 2.1%. Most of the top-selling luxury brands aren't saddled with huge inventory overhangs. At the end of August, BMW had 30 days worth of unsold vehicles on dealer lots, Mercedes had 62 days' worth of unsold vehicles and Lexus 41 days' worth.
 
Audi has already largely sold off leftover 2008 A4 models, and dealers have only about a month's worth left, as they await delivery of redesigned A4s from Germany.
 
Luxury brand shoppers – particularly fans of European brands -- who are considering buying a new car in the next few months should probably book time to discuss options with dealers this month. Otherwise, it may be best to wait to see how the December year-end deals look.
#812 of 1108
BMW x5 end of lease residual discount by snickers6
Sep 19, 2008 (12:47 pm)
Reply
Was getting ready to turn in my 06 x5 4.4 18k miles. Residual was 43k, BMW offered a 13,700 discount letting me buy it at 29300. Plus 3.9% financing if I wanted it.
#813 of 1108
Re: BMW x5 end of lease residual discount [snickers6] by billmv
Sep 19, 2008 (1:25 pm)
Reply

Replying to: snickers6 (Sep 19, 2008 12:47 pm)

I have an '05 X5 4.4 that is a few weeks from lease end, and they offered to sell it to me for $4,000 less than the approx $38,000 contracted residual, with cheap 100% financing. I forget the rate. Just FYI.
#814 of 1108
Re: [drewmisha] by Car_man HOST
Sep 23, 2008 (3:44 am)
Reply

Replying to: drewmisha (Sep 05, 2008 7:50 am)

Here you go, drewmisha. BMW Financial Services' current buy rate lease money factor and residual value for a 36 month lease of a 2008 X5 4.8 with 12,000 miles per year are .00175 and 57%, respectively. This money factor is reduced by .00080 on models that are not equipped with the free Premium Package.
 
Car_man
Host
Prices Paid: Buying & Leasing Experiences Forum

Messages Page 82 of 112
1
...
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
...
112
Prev
Next
Last
Go To Msg #
Search This Discussion
To POST a message, please Sign In.

New? Join Now!

Forum Tools

Please sign in.
Email Address:

Password:

Forgot Password?

Search Forums

Enter Keyword(s)

Advanced Search

Browse by Vehicle



View All Vehicles
Advertisement
Ask the Community
See What People Are Asking

Browse by Board

Browse by Topic


View All Topics

Today's Chats

Advertisement