flapjake314
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2022
- Threads
- 38
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- 682
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- Location
- NYC
- Vehicles
- Mach-E Select AWD
- Thread starter
- #1
i'll start by saying i have extensive experience in corporate finance but have never leased a car nor looked into it with a lot of detail
i see a lot of people say to lease new EV's (and the Mach E specifically) because of the steep depreciation (no need to discuss the $7500 tax credit, the stated reason is depreciation).
this makes no sense to me. depreciation is factored into the lease, and the fact that it is steep means consumers are paying for the steepest part of it when they lease. a lease can be created synthetically by buying the car, pre-agreeing today on the future 36th month resale price, and financing the transaction for 36 months. why would steep depreciation = better to lease? you'd almost think the opposite...
the only reason leasing would be better is if the actual depreciation is even steeper than the calculated depreciation today. when i did the math 3 years ago, the lease was implying ~70% of the value would be depreciated so i decided to just buy.
in my opinion, leasing is just a pre-bundled finance + trade-in package. if you are planning to do both anyway, take a look at leasing. if you weren't going to trade in your car every 3 years nor get financing, unless you have some kind of crystal ball about car values, i cannot understand why the steepness of depreciation would make you want to lease.
i see a lot of people say to lease new EV's (and the Mach E specifically) because of the steep depreciation (no need to discuss the $7500 tax credit, the stated reason is depreciation).
this makes no sense to me. depreciation is factored into the lease, and the fact that it is steep means consumers are paying for the steepest part of it when they lease. a lease can be created synthetically by buying the car, pre-agreeing today on the future 36th month resale price, and financing the transaction for 36 months. why would steep depreciation = better to lease? you'd almost think the opposite...
the only reason leasing would be better is if the actual depreciation is even steeper than the calculated depreciation today. when i did the math 3 years ago, the lease was implying ~70% of the value would be depreciated so i decided to just buy.
in my opinion, leasing is just a pre-bundled finance + trade-in package. if you are planning to do both anyway, take a look at leasing. if you weren't going to trade in your car every 3 years nor get financing, unless you have some kind of crystal ball about car values, i cannot understand why the steepness of depreciation would make you want to lease.
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