How big a deposit are you talking to do what you're doing with the Beemer, Exonian? What does it really cost you a month (average) for your deposit +£80 a month over your 24 or 36 months?
I hate paying interest on anything so purely asked for the deal I assumed (without doing any sums first) would pay the least interest over the term.
So maximum deposit would be around £12k or £13k cash plus or including(?) dealer and BMW discounts.
This was pricing the car to just under our new favourite figure of £40k (excluding first year car tax) over a 24 month contract.
I’m sure the figures can be juggled around with deposit amount and GFV versus interest paid over the term ranging between 24, 36 or 48 months if a bit of time was spent on the abacus.
Dealer and importer discounts amounted to just over £7k
I’m not sure that’s even the right way of looking at it anymore. I’m looking at it from a previous cash buyer perspective but once you’re in the PCP cycle it all goes out the window. If you’re paying PCP interest on car A but plan on buying car B after 24/36/48 months then you’ll be paying interest on that too, with a balloon payment on that too so maybe it’s better to just forget the headline figures and look solely at what you can afford a month... which is exactly what the industry wants us to do.
What does it matter anyway, it’s a never ending cycle and I guess many of us are the last of the generation brought up to only buy what you can afford to pay cash for where most of the under 40’s look at it purely as what they can afford a month. The world has moved on, whichever way you pay for it the buyer gets what he/she wants.
Interesting and valid point about 48 month PCP’s there MH.
It started with houses. I bought young but still missed out on the pre-boom early/mid ‘80’s prices most of my slightly colleagues bought at. They bought on 20 year mortgages and got 3 bed semis for less than I bought a flat for and I needed a 25 year mortgage as I was young and broke and had an unreliable mk1 GTI to fix!
My kids now have Help To Buy schemes and 40 year mortgages having been sensible and saved up money as thankfully they have no interest in cars.
That’s how the world has moved on.
The generation just in front of me bought a 3 bed semi as a first house and stayed there until it was paid off, the following generations don’t have that luxury and capitalism has cashed in on it big time.
So long as we get what we want then I guess it doesn’t really matter how it was financed, it’s just about balancing it out and trying not to pay over the odds during the never ending cycle.
Does the “it’s wasted money if it’s not in bricks and mortar” saying even still apply these days? With people paying mortgages into their 70’s nowadays I’m not so sure unless you’re one of the people in the formerly hugely popular BTL fashion with ever expanding portfolios.
Mobile phone contracts are also sneaking up to 36 months I’ve noticed. Reflecting price increases and the fact smart phones are no longer novelty items with sizeable jumps in useable performance hooking people in to change up frequently. Most people seem quite blasé about smart phones now so seem less interested in the latest phones because even four year old ones have useable functionality rather than just tech for tech’s sake. I’m still running wildly out of date phones feeling no inclination to upgrade until I get a car with a wireless charger. The young lads at work don’t seem that bothered about upgrades these days, they’re getting too expensive so their iPhone 8’s with smashed screens seem to soldier on!
Even an up! GTI costs about £17k now so I’m sure speccing an Audi A1 north of £30k is quite easy.
No wonder they’re on 48 month contracts.
The only way broker prices really save you money is if there is no part exchange vehicle. This is why PCP hand backs and leases are so convenient now with the way the market has positioned itself.