jsphlynch
Well-Known Member
If you're buying stocks with borrowed money, you're playing with money you don't have. Consider the following hypothetical situation:Nothing, assuming sufficient reserves. Definitely don't play with money you don't have--using various tools to manage cashflow and liquidity is not the same thing as speculating on overleveraged margin. So what can you do if you lose your job and have a car loan? Well, if you have sufficient cash reserves (you must, you were going to pay cash, right?) you simply pay the monthly out of the reserves. In this case you're probably better off having a known monthly payment to budget for plus a pot of money instead of having no payment and no money because you spent all your cash on the car. That gives you time to figure out what to do, instead of needing to panic-sell the car to buy food or whatever.
I’ve scrimped and saved, and now have $37,000 (in addition to an emergency fund) to buy my dream truck. Little do I know that the auto bubble is going to pop when the economy tanks a year later. Choose your own adventure:
Scenario A: I pay cash and own the truck outright. Every month for the next year, instead of making a car payment, I put $440 into stocks, which are frustratingly flat over that year. Economy tanks and I lose my job. I have no car payment, so I make it through on my emergency fund no problem. I keep my truck, which I love. In the current market it’s only worth $20k, but I’m ok with that because I have no plans to sell it. The value of my year’s worth of investing is down to ~$3k, but I don’t need to tap into my investment. As the economy recovers, I get a new job and commute in my Ranger. Meanwhile, the stocks have made up their losses, so I once again have over $5k in the investment account and no debt. With no monthly truck payments, I re-establish financial security by saving $440/month to rebuild my emergency fund.
Scenario B: I take their offer for 84 months at 0% because it’s “free” money. I have a monthly payment of $440, which easily fits into my budget (which I stick to religiously). With the payment, I don’t have room in the budget to build savings, but instead I invest the $37,000 cash I was going to pay for the truck into a diversified stock portfolio, which stays flat for the next year. Economy tanks and I lose my job. I can meet most of my basic expenses with my emergency fund, but not the car payment. I still owe a little over $31k on the truck, which is now only worth $20k. To avoid defaulting on the payments, I sell my stocks, which are now worth $22k, and the truck, using the stock sale to pay the balance of the truck loan and buy a 2011 F-150. As the economy recovers, I get a new job and commute in my aging F-150. I have no savings, but I have no car payment so I start saving $440 per month to rebuild my emergency fund.
Scenario C: As in “B” I take the finance offer and invest my cash. However, when the economy tanks, I really want to keep the truck, so I start selling off my stocks (now worth $22k after the crash) to be able to keep making the monthly payments. A year later, my stocks are now down to $16,700 due to the payments, when the economy makes a miraculous overnight recovery, with the stock market exactly making up its losses from the year prior, bringing the value of my remaining investment up to just under $28k. I get to commute to my new job in my beloved Ranger, which I still owe over $26k on. However, I’ve used up my emergency fund, and don’t have room in my budget to rebuild it because of the car payment.
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