I think you may be on to somethingJust a different perspective
I think you may be on to somethingJust a different perspective
Exactly. $45k plus 6.5% sales tax minus $38.5k with no sales tax.I think the fudged numbers are the difference in purchasing new (with sales tax) vs purchasing lightly used with zero tax.
8% for a personal loan is very high, but even at 8% the interest over five years is about $8k. So assuming a new sale price of $45k for my tractor as it sits it's basically a wash, and my tractor is available now rather than 6 to 9 months from now. Whether or not the typical tractor buyer will see it that way remains to be seen.I googled used tractor loan rates and came up with 6-8% and up to a 5 year term. With this information its easy to see the value of buying new with 0% Kubota financing. At the $38,500 asking price the interest payments over 5 years might be $10,000. The average American has little in savings. Most folks can do without a $38,500 tractor. Just a different perspective. No one mentioned eBay. Good luck.
Stick with your $38.5K price!8% for a personal loan is very high, but even at 8% the interest over five years is about $8k. So assuming a new sale price of $45k for my tractor as it sits it's basically a wash, and my tractor is available now rather than 6 to 9 months from now. Whether or not the typical tractor buyer will see it that way remains to be seen.
I'll make an update if I sell the tractor. I did reply to the party in WA and informed them that $37.5k is as low as I'll go and I won't deliver it for that amount.
Thanks for all the input. It's good to get different perspectives and also a reality check.
Everyone’s situation is different and lots of folks have cash on hand. Personally I wouldn’t pull that much cash from investments, nor would I finance a used tractor at 5%+ interest when I can (and did) finance at 0% through Kubota. Especially since the monthly payment would probably be higher for the used unit. Nothing wrong with your tractor; that’s just what I think a lot of folks consider. Good luck whether you keep it or sell it.Thanks everyone for such positive and well thought out responses. Every post here deserves 10 likes from me. I really appreciate the different ways you all have of thinking about this situation and it gives me some insight into what potential buyers are thinking about.
I forgot to mention that the couple in WA asked me about adding a cab to the open station. I told them that an aftermarket cab isn't available and that there's no way to upgrade an open station to a cab through Kubota, that I'm aware of anyway. That may have scuttled any potential sale but honesty is always the best policy.
The difference between $45K with sales tax and $38.5 k without tax is $2925.Exactly. $45k plus 6.5% sales tax minus $38.5k with no sales tax.
Just how would you propose to finance through Kubota at 0%, when the new tractor you may want is unobtanium?Everyone’s situation is different and lots of folks have cash on hand. Personally I wouldn’t pull that much cash from investments, nor would I finance a used tractor at 5%+ interest when I can (and did) finance at 0% through Kubota. Especially since the monthly payment would probably be higher for the used unit. Nothing wrong with your tractor; that’s just what I think a lot of folks consider. Good luck whether you keep it or sell it.
I just did last month. I was on a waiting list with 5 dealers in 3 states. One called me and had what I wanted. I think it would take forever to wait on one dealer to get inventory.The difference between $45K with sales tax and $38.5 k without tax is $2925.
Where did the $9,200 number come from?
Just how would you propose to finance through Kubota at 0%, when the new tractor you may want is unobtanium?
Would need to be ordered piece by piece through the parts department at prohibitive expense.curious... in #31, you say no way for cab 'upgrade', but arn't both tractors MX6000 ?
Just wondering why you can't order a cab from Kubota with 'some assembly required' ??