MACK said:I have always though that when it comes to Balloon Finance on a new car (or even used) you are best off treating the whole thing as a 2/3/4 lease and leave minimal deposit. If you want a new car every few years (in the same way as say a company car) its great, keeps the repayments low and depending on mileage, length of term etc your protected by the manufacturer warranty. if you keep the deposit low upon renewal your not worried about not having a trade in this time or much if any equity in the existing PCP vehicle and you start the whole process again.
If you get attached to cars or just like to keep cars for longer then tradition hire purchase/bank loans etc are probably more suitable.
The car industry is currently facing something of a perfect storm of its own creation.
CAP/HPI have been warning the trade for a while now of downward pressure on residuals because of the shear number of used cars hitting and about to hit the market coming off company lease and PCP's etc.
All these record new car sales have to go somewhere secondhand and I think next time around for most folks going to replace a PCP with another PCP the new PCP vehicle residual (guaranteed future value) wont be anything like as strong. This coupled to the fact that a lot of folks out there used a p/x vehicles as a deposit worth thousands last time around and wont have this or any equity in their current PCP will mean an equivalent car on a PCP that cost you say £250-300p/m last time out might be a £500 next time.
Doesn't bode well for future new car sales, with a lot of folks flipping back to used or even keeping hold of their existing PCP vehicle long term
lux said:I've had positive equity on both of my e89's (£4.5K in the last one) and both were trade ins too.
I got £16,000 for my 12 plate 2.0 auto Msport with 24,000 miles on it in November!
My old one is now up for £18,000 at a dealer so £11,000 is taking the piss.
Surely they just walk away - The Guaranteed future value is just that - If the car isn't worth the GMFV you hand back the keys and it's their problem - unless I'm missing something - which is entirely possibletechathy said:I know of 2 people who've ended up taking out a lone to pay off their PCP balloon payment as they were in negative equity due to massively over-optimistic GMFV (75% of new value after 3 years... really?!)
Your rightJasey said:Surely they just walk away - The Guaranteed future value is just that - If the car isn't worth the GMFV you hand back the keys and it's their problem - unless I'm missing something - which is entirely possibletechathy said:I know of 2 people who've ended up taking out a lone to pay off their PCP balloon payment as they were in negative equity due to massively over-optimistic GMFV (75% of new value after 3 years... really?!)
Sorry - You've already answered this above![]()
Z4M-2006 said:Im sure they will want your car..
Such low miles and spring approaching... They offer you a stupid offer so you throw it back at them..
AUC on the forecourt price will be £18000....
Sytners is it ?
It defines the final payment & is nominally representative of an okay to marginal bad condition car after age & miles. However some manufactures finance departments have given GMFV valuations which stink of cooking the figures to get sales through the door. Being fair every GMFV figure I've seen on BMW finance has been reasonably pessimistic looking at exiting trade in values for okay condition cars.TonyP said:So what's the point of a Guaranteed Future Value if it's err not guaranteed, I'm missing something here...
Jasey said:Another little known option on PCP deals is that once you are half way through (paid half the cost) you can hand the car back and stop the payments.
So if you got yourself a heavily depreciating turd you can cut your losses once you paid back half of it !
MACK said:Jasey said:Another little known option on PCP deals is that once you are half way through (paid half the cost) you can hand the car back and stop the payments.
So if you got yourself a heavily depreciating turd you can cut your losses once you paid back half of it !
the halfs and thirds rule is what you referring. You have to be careful with this and PCP's as its half the total amount payable under the entire agreement including the balloon payment (gfv) and all interest. In reality, depending on deposit this is means your a good 3/4 of the way through your deal if not more before handing it back becomes an option.