Can you remember reading, seeing or
hearing a car dealer’s advertisement that had no fine print? The TV
advertisements are especially egregious because, even with HD, it’s literally
impossible to read the fine print. If the print were large enough, it’s not
displayed on the screen long enough for you to completely read it. You’ve all
heard the radio “fine print”. The advertisers are experts at making it
incomprehensible. One trick is to put the disclosure at the beginning of the ad
so that it appears not to be a part of the advertisement. They will use a
different voice, which speaks very softly and very fast. I believe that they
record the disclosure at normal speed and electronically increase the speed of
the recording to an incomprehensible level. The fine print in newspapers and
direct mail is the only fine print that is even possible to read and it often
takes a magnifying glass to do so. Some tricks to make it even more unreadable
are to make the color of the print blend with the background color of the paper
(dark blue print on a dark red background), obfuscate the message by mixing in
some legitimate, irrelevant disclosures like “Dodge is a copyrighted brand name
of Chrysler Corporation, and they usually locate the fine print as far away
from their false claims as possible.
Of course fine print deception is not
limited to car dealer advertisements. Car manufacturers, pharmaceutical
companies, and most other retailers take advantage of their customers in this
manner too.
The Federal Trade Commission says
that advertisers are not allowed to “contradict other statements in an ad or
to clear up the misimpressions the ad would otherwise leave.” The FTC also
says that “Accurate information in a footnote or a dense block of text
likely will not remedy a deceptive representation conveyed by a headline or
other prominent selling message because reasonable consumers may not read the
footnote.”
Car dealer leasing ads and car
manufacturer leasing ads commonly advertise low lease payments with large down
payments, often obfuscated as “capital cost reductions”. You’ll see a new BMW
advertised for $399 per month but when you take in consideration the $8,000
down payment which is impossible to read on the TV screen, the payment might
actually be $899 per month.
You see a lot of “100% Guaranteed
Credit Approval Ads”, but the fine print says that your credit score will
affect the terms and down payment. Interpreted, this means if you have bad
credit, you will have to make a down payment up to 100% of the price of the car
and the financing terms could be as short as one month. The disclaimer in the
fine print is a total contradiction of the headline, bold print claim of the ad
and a violation of Federal law.
A popular deception by many car
dealers is to advertise a very low price in the headline of the ad with the
fine print totally contradicting the ad price. This is done by the fine print
saying that the “price excludes dealer installed accessories” which can total
thousands of dollars. The fine print also often says “customer must qualify for
all rebates and incentives”. These are impossible for any one person to qualify
for such as military rebate, college rebate, loyalty rebate, and conquest
rebate. To qualify for all the rebates one would have to be on active duty in
the military, a graduate of a 4 year accredited college within the past 6 months,
drive the same make car as is advertised, and drive a specific
competitive make car at the same time.
Another fine print scam is “Lowest
Price Guaranteed or We Pay You $1,000”. There’s even one dealer who says he’ll
give you the car free if he can’t beat his competitor’s price. The fine
print says the dealer reserves the right to buy the other car from his
competitor at the lower price. Now, what are the odds that your car dealer’s
competitor will agree to that? The fine print also says that you must bring him
a buyer’s order signed by the other dealer to verify the lower price. Have you
ever asked a car dealer to give you a signed copy of a buyer’s order without
actually buying the car from him? He won’t give it to you for the simple reason
he doesn’t want to allow his competitor to see it and beat his price.
Florida law requires that dealer fees
be included in the advertised price of all cars. Most dealers do not to this
but instead disclose the dealer fee in the fine print. Often times they do not
even disclose the amount of the dealer fee but simply say “plus dealer fee” or
“plus fees”. Florida law does not put a cap on dealer fees as many states do.
In theory, a dealer could have a $10,000 or higher dealer fee. Many have dealer
fees over $1,000 now. This practice is a clear violation of the Federal Trade
Commission’s rules.
I read in the newspaper last week
that Governor Rick Scott had just signed 8 more bills into law. This week we
have 8 more laws than we did last week. What our state and our country need are
not more laws, its more enforcement of the laws we already have on the books.
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