Your Money: Tips from financial advisers on making car
deals
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[September 27, 2017]
By Beth Pinsker
NEW YORK(Reuters) - People hate buying
cars, because they think the seller will take advantage of them.
That is why many financial advisers offer car-buying help as a concierge
service. Some advisers will call ahead to negotiate for you, some will
go car shopping with you and some will go the whole last mile and
arrange for a car delivery, so you never even have to set foot in a
dealership.
Buying a car "is the second-largest expense our clients are likely to
have after buying a house," said Rick Kagawa, a certified financial
planner in Huntington Beach, California.
Here are three tips from financial advisers on purchasing a car:
1. Shop online first - with an open mind
If you walk into a dealership for a test drive, you are going to get the
hard sell, so financial adviser Larry Ginsburg does what he can to keep
his clients at home until he has a deal wrapped up for them.
Ginsburg, based in Oakland, California, finds out what they want in
general terms - never asking about a color - and then researches what is
available at nearby dealers. You also can use a service like TrueCar.com
or car-buying portals like Costcoauto.com to get an "upfront" price on
your own.
Another pro tip: Ask for the internet sales person at the dealership.
"They will give you a decent price upfront," adds Kagawa.
Be careful not to get swayed by sales pitches, though. When Kagawa
recently went to purchase a Jeep Cherokee for himself, all the
car-buying services were within $300 to $500 of each other. He narrowed
his choices down to two dealers who both had white models in stock and
started to negotiate when one offered $5,200 less than the sticker price
and the other was at $6,000.
2. Have patience
Car salespeople are trained to be hard closers. They will play you off
among various people in the office, and go back and forth from their
computer to a mythical supervisor to get approvals for each discount.
Never tell a dealer you need a car that day, even if you are one of the
several hundred thousand people from a hurricane-ravaged area whose cars
got flooded.
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New cars are shown for sale at a Chevrolet dealership in National
City, California, U.S., June 30, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake
"Say six months. Say you're doing preliminary research," said Ginsburg.
It's also a good idea to say you are considering a purchase with another
manufacturer, he adds.
3. Stick to your budget
Ginsburg has fired clients who want to buy cars that are way too
expensive for them.
"One client wanted to buy a car that was more than her annual salary,"
he said with a sigh.
For financial adviser Michelle Buonincontri, coaching on the budget is
the major part of her service. Her clients at New Direction Financial
Strategies near Phoenix tend to be women who have been recently divorced
or widowed. Many of them are first-time solo car owners.
Buonincontri shows them how to review their credit, shop interest rates
and insurance and, in general, to understand the true cost of vehicle
ownership.
She also practices what she preaches. When she went to buy a used car
for her teenage daughter three years ago, she figured out her all-in
budget was $8,000 and told the salesman not to waste her time with
anything over that amount.
"Of course, he showed me a car that was $4,000 ahead of that. He went
back and forth to supposedly speak to his manager. I said, 'No deal,'
and I left," Buonincontri said.
A week later, the salesman called back and offered her the black Honda
Accord - loaded with extras and including the registration and tax - at
her target price, and she took the deal.
"That was my price point, and it was worth it," Buonincontri said.
(Editing by Lauren Young and Dan Grebler)
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