RE: Re: RE: Re: RE: Re: RE: Financing older (< 2001) Naut
Scag is right. In the big picture of financial gain SOMETIMES it makes sense to finance. I don't think the floor is going to drop that quickly to put you out of the picture on a 15-20k boat. You should anticipate putting at least 10% down on any "luxury" item. Credit unions are great, but I would also look at a smaller (400-500 million) local bank that's doing well, which should have similar terms/rates to a credit union. Just find one that's not in trouble. There are plenty that are doing great, who have managed their portfolio's well. Assuming you have top tier credit (740+) I would expect to pay 7-8% with 10% down, and be able to go 120-144 months. For a smaller loan amount (under 25k) you might pay a higher rate, maybe even double digits. You can also inquire with an actual marine financier like www.boatloan.com - (ask for JR) and he can give you the skinny. I would definately recommend a local bank, or joining a credit union.
The deal that Scag is talking about is that if you have 25k and could spend it on a boat, versus an appreciating asset is a great thought, just one that needs solidified with actual numbers. That same 25k invested at 10% (3 year annuity - very safe - right now is earning 8%) might net you more money that financing the boat, and I've included a look at some numbers below.
25,000 at a compounding average of 10% over 15 years is 111.347.99
25,000 loan at 8%, paying regular payments costs you 43,000.34 in cash.
This nets you 68.347.65 gain after cash and a boat title.
Or you pay cash for the boat, and pay the payment amount into the same annuity/investment
25,000 nets you a boat title.
Payments into annuity of 238.91 for 15 years compounding at 10% yields 99.021.11 so in that case it's a 30k higher gain.
There's a million ways to figure it out, but there's always one way better than another. Invest early, invest often. A boat, however, is more an investment into my children's smiles and family time, which doens't carry a quantifiable dollar figure.
Scag is right. In the big picture of financial gain SOMETIMES it makes sense to finance. I don't think the floor is going to drop that quickly to put you out of the picture on a 15-20k boat. You should anticipate putting at least 10% down on any "luxury" item. Credit unions are great, but I would also look at a smaller (400-500 million) local bank that's doing well, which should have similar terms/rates to a credit union. Just find one that's not in trouble. There are plenty that are doing great, who have managed their portfolio's well. Assuming you have top tier credit (740+) I would expect to pay 7-8% with 10% down, and be able to go 120-144 months. For a smaller loan amount (under 25k) you might pay a higher rate, maybe even double digits. You can also inquire with an actual marine financier like www.boatloan.com - (ask for JR) and he can give you the skinny. I would definately recommend a local bank, or joining a credit union.
The deal that Scag is talking about is that if you have 25k and could spend it on a boat, versus an appreciating asset is a great thought, just one that needs solidified with actual numbers. That same 25k invested at 10% (3 year annuity - very safe - right now is earning 8%) might net you more money that financing the boat, and I've included a look at some numbers below.
25,000 at a compounding average of 10% over 15 years is 111.347.99
25,000 loan at 8%, paying regular payments costs you 43,000.34 in cash.
This nets you 68.347.65 gain after cash and a boat title.
Or you pay cash for the boat, and pay the payment amount into the same annuity/investment
25,000 nets you a boat title.
Payments into annuity of 238.91 for 15 years compounding at 10% yields 99.021.11 so in that case it's a 30k higher gain.
There's a million ways to figure it out, but there's always one way better than another. Invest early, invest often. A boat, however, is more an investment into my children's smiles and family time, which doens't carry a quantifiable dollar figure.
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