In
previous columns I have recommended that you avoid reading most cars ads in the
newspaper and in direct mail. Most TV and radio car ads are similarly
misleading. My suggestion is that you carefully choose the precise year, make,
and model you want with the precise accessories and get at least 3 legitimate
bids from car dealers on the Internet or, next best, at the dealerships.
However, if you do find yourself perusing the large number of car ads in the
local paper, here are some translations of common misleading ads. I took these
straight from a local paper.
20%
to 40% OFF MSRP. Never buy a car based on how big a discount you are quoted.
Always calculate the price you are willing to pay based on an accurate
understanding of the cost of that vehicle. Different makes and models have
different markups and factory incentives can cause the true markup to vary
widely. What sounds like a big discount may also pay the dealer too big a
profit.
LIQUIDATION
SALE. Most of the time you pay just as much for a car during a “sale” as you do
without a sale. The only exceptions are factory incentives which do have an
expiration date. A “sale” is what advertisers refer to as a “call to action”.
They are looking for something that will motivate you to come in today,
rather than procrastinate. It doesn’t seem to matter if the motivation is
untrue.
UP
TO $15,000 OFF. Many dealers have an additional markup on top of the
manufacturer’s suggested retail price, MSRP. They commonly label this a “Market
Adjustment Addendum”. This can be thousands of dollars. Discounting a car
thousands of dollars means nothing if the dealer just added a “Market
Adjustment Addendum” for an amount equaling or exceeding the discount.
STK#62029A.
When you see a number like this next to the price of a new car, it means that
that is the only car you can buy for that price. The number is the stock number
for that specific car which is supposed to tell you that this is the only car
at this price. Many of these ad cars are of undesirable colors and accessories.
They are advertised below cost and the loss is charged to advertising if they
have to sell one. You chances of buying one of these are slim and none.
CREDIT
PROLEMS ARE NO PROBLEM. This type of ad is particularly insensitive and
distasteful. It is meant to attract people who have such bad credit that they
think they cannot obtain financing. Unfortunately, there are people whose
credit is so bad that no lender will offer them financing. These people are
disappointed and embarrassed when they learn the truth that “credit problems
can be, in fact, big problems”.
MINIMUM
$10,000 TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE. This is just like the huge discounts. A trade in
allowance means nothing if the car has been marked up high enough to offset the
extra trade-in allowance.
WITH
ACCEPTABLE CREDIT. This allows dealers to add a fine print disqualifier which
is an extremely high Beacon score that disqualifies 99% of the car buying
population. It is used in conjunction with very low lease payments or purchase
payments. It is a “bait and switch” which affords the dealer the opportunity to
raise your payments (and his profits) because your credit is “not acceptable”…to
him.
PRICE
GOOD ON DATE OF PUBLICATION ONLY. You will find this only in the fine print at
the bottom of the page. This is added protection to the dealer, in addition to
the stock # mentioned above, that he won’t have to sell you the car at the
advertised price.
AS
LOW AS or FROM. You will see this in
smaller print next to a very big price and a big, pretty picture of the car.
This is a further “C.Y.A.” for the dealer so that he doesn’t have to sell that
car at that price.
WE’LL
BEAT ANY OTHER DEALER’S PRICE OR THE CAR IS FREE. Some claims are so outlandish
that I hesitate to bother warning you about them. Applying the old saying “if
it sounds too good to be true, it probably isn’t” should protect most people
from this kind of ad.
I
could go on and on, but I hope I have already made my point. Car dealers’ ads
are the absolutely worst way to decide which car you should buy and what price
you should pay. When you respond to most car dealers’ ads, they are in control.
You must take control and let the dealer respond to your carefully thought
out and researched choice of year, make, model, accessories, and what price
you offer to pay him.
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