Desdichado
Hero
Well, that doesn't make much sense to me, true. (And I mispoke earlier -- my car is ten years old, but I've had it for eight. I bought it used on a five year note. And I know that my overall cash outlay was greater for having it be five year, but at the time, short term cash flow was important to me; I was still in school.) If you have to have a new car every 2-3 years for whatever reason, a lease is the only way to go.Old One said:Many Americans buy brand new cars, finance them with 5-8 year car notes, drive them for 2-3 years and then trade them in on another brand new car. I did a regression analysis on this a couple of years ago using a 2-car couple buying $25,000 autos with each transaction and they ended up wasting something like $400,000 in depreciation and interest opportunity costs over a 30-year car buying time frame.
