Excellent point. My oldest son, who bought a new Bronco Sport last year, pays cash for everything. He is, well, FRUGAL. He could fork out over $30K in cash, but he had zero credit rating because he's never had a loan in his life. He ended up exploiting Ford Credit's super-low interest available at the time - not because he had to, but because in some circumstances it may work out better for him in the future. Another thing: lease or loan payments can be itemized as expenses for businesses, and often can be turned in as business losses due to vehicle appreciation. Bottom line: it's not always as simple as "hey, look at me: I paid cash for this thing!"So you're going to refinance to pay them all of the money that is otherwise interest-free to pay?
In my mind, giving anyone else my money when I can make more by keeping it is worse. Thus, I have no problem with car loans and home loans, because I make more money keeping my money that paying for a car with cash, even factoring the interest paid on the loan. Also, paying $6,000 at once is far more disruptive to me than $500/month for one year. What happens if you have another cash emergency? Now, if I had ot pay a high interest rate, that would be a different story.
Example:
Financed a car at 1.9% interest and kept the cash invested, and before the loan was paid off, I had already earned enough money that I could have paid cash for the car. $35,000 initial cash + $35,000 earned - $36,700 principal and interest paid + $25K car residual value > $25K car residual value.
Finances are an individual decision, I get it. But if I have to work, then my money has to work just as hard.![]()
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