nkyguy1988

nkyguy1988 t1_j22d5b7 wrote

Fidelity has a teen account. Check that out. Use this opportunity to teach fund investing. I personally would not let them make any single stock picks at all. It's a good practice to learn and a fairly small amount of money invested early can turn to millions if done early enough.

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nkyguy1988 t1_j205lu6 wrote

Any option you have results in paying off the loan. Whether that is by trade, private party sale, or payoff. Given the market trend, you probably won't get what was paid for it.

Your interest calculation. It's just wrong. The 6.94 rate is per year. On a monthly basis you have around .55% of the load balance added to the remaining principal to find the interest accrued.

You end up paying that much in dealer markup (pure profit over MSRP), add on packages, service contracts, plus fees as you mention. You get to this point by not knowing what was being signed and being sold a bunch of things they probably didn't need.

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nkyguy1988 t1_j1x3qvg wrote

Know your numbers before going.

Only negotiate on the actual price of the car. Never, ever base your negotiation budget on a monthly payment.

Get a pre approval for financing before going.

There is probably other things people can add too.

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nkyguy1988 t1_iujvfyx wrote

Is the car worth 100s of thousands in retirement? Where is your retirment allocation? You don't need us to tell you this is an incredibly stupid idea. What car could be so special that made you wait a really long time for at only 27?

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nkyguy1988 t1_iuejmfj wrote

You need to just take the hit once, take out what you can and pay bills that way.

Take out 500$ cash even if it's an overdraft, pay the 30 on that, then pay 5 100$ bills and cost is 530$. If you pay essentially 130 per bill, now that's 650 you are paying. You must stop paying each bill on its own fee. Get a side job doing door dash just to get you to safely above.

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nkyguy1988 t1_iueey8l wrote

Only do pre-approval when you are serious about actually buying. They are only good for about 90 days anyway.

Yes, a pre-approval cares about money you have today. That's the literal point of a pre-approval. If you don't have funds today, you won't be approved, so starting it now is pointless.

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nkyguy1988 t1_iudxxn6 wrote

The used car market is flipping drastically in the last few months. KBB gives retail prices, you never trade a car for retail prices. Negative equity only has one way out, pay it off. Doesn't matter if you pay extra now or wait until you get a refund. It's all pretty much the same anyway in the end.

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nkyguy1988 t1_iuds5n1 wrote

Well, if it sounds too good to be true.....it most likely is.

Again, it's not on them to spell out every single bullet point. You signed it. You agreed to it. Period. There was no intererest. There was no interest provided you paid by a certain date. They didn't lie. You didn't understand the difference. Again, that's ultimately on you, not them.

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nkyguy1988 t1_iu92vlx wrote

People have never made more than 50k per year retire multi millionaires. Do you think they have big deposits or money to make investing worth it? Time has this magical power to multiply returns, doubling the amount every 7-10 years on average.

Good investing is boring investing. All of your "investing" things you have been are trading or gambling. Investing and trading are not the same thing.

Also nothing wrong with pursuing a side hustle after everything is taken care of. The biggest mistake you could make would be not putting money into a broad market fund and literally not looking at it for 30 years other than when you make your annual contributions.

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