How Car Dealerships Rip You Off (The Truth)

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 2. 06. 2024
  • In this video I explain exactly how car dealerships rip you off. A lot of car dealerships implement the four square method, which is just a simple way to make you think that you're getting a deal.
    Car dealerships are a very sophisticated network of stores that know how to separate you from your money. Not all dealerships rip you off, but the ones that use the four square method do.
    Don't get ripped off on your next car purchase and watch this video until the end.
    WBF UNIVERSITY - JOIN MY SCHOOL HERE
    ► whiteboardfinance.com/wbf-uni...
    LIMITED TIME - Get 1 FREE STOCK ON ROBINHOOD
    ► whiteboardfinance.com/go/robi...
    FUNDRISE - INVEST IN REAL ESTATE FOR ONLY $500
    ► whiteboardfinance.com/go/fund...
    M1 FINANCE - INVEST FOR FREE (Yes, Really)
    ► whiteboardfinance.com/go/m1-f...
    My FREE M1 Finance Training Video
    ► whiteboardfinance.com/go/m1-f...
    My FREE Stock Market For Beginners Guide
    ► whiteboardfinance.com/go/stoc...
    GET MY HOME AFFORDABILITY SPREADSHEET HERE
    ► / whiteboardfinance
    SCHEDULE A COACHING CALL WITH ME
    ► whiteboardfinance.com/go/mark...
    HOW TO BUY & STORE BITCOIN
    ► whiteboardfinance.com/go/bitcoin
    THE BEST CREDIT CARDS TO USE RIGHT NOW
    ► whiteboardfinance.com/go/best...
    CHECK OUT MY BLOG:
    ► whiteboardfinance.com
    FOLLOW ME ON INSTAGRAM
    ► / whiteboardfinance
    Instrumental Produced By "iAmHaywood" on IG
    Instrumental Produced By Chuki:
    / chukimusic
    ABOUT ME 👇
    My mission is to provide my viewers with actionable content that enables them to create financial wealth. My videos are a reflection of my real-world experience as a real estate investor, stock market investor, student of finance, and entrepreneur.
    This channel allows me to share my passion for personal finance, stock market investing, real estate investing, and entrepreneurship. I produce content that I would want to watch, and because of that, I give 100% effort in every video that I make. I also believe in complete transparency and open communication with my audience.
    Subscribe if you are interested in:
    #Investing
    #PersonalFinance
    #Entrepreneurship
    #StockMarket
    DISCLAIMER: I am not a financial adviser. These videos are for educational purposes only. Investing of any kind involves risk. While it is possible to minimize risk, your investments are solely your responsibility. It is imperative that you conduct your own research. I am merely sharing my opinion with no guarantee of gains or losses on investments.
    AFFILIATE DISCLOSURE: Some of the links on this channel are affiliate links, meaning, at NO additional cost to you, I may earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase and/or subscribe. However, this does not impact my opinion.

Komentáře • 21K

  • @80kol23
    @80kol23 Před 4 lety +3476

    I sold cars for 20 plus years, he is correct about it all.

    • @justacinnamonbun8658
      @justacinnamonbun8658 Před 4 lety +97

      _"If you don't want a shark bite, don't swim with the sharks."_
      That's what happens when you walk into a new car dealership. I'm never buying a new car again LOL. I love Craigslist and Letgo, and I have a BlueDriver OBDII scan tool and cash in my pocket.

    • @BollywoodMediaOnline
      @BollywoodMediaOnline Před 4 lety +37

      Thanks for your honesty.

    • @jblaze4694
      @jblaze4694 Před 4 lety +33

      Except we don’t use 4 squares anymore. We let the pencil do the talking and grind it out from there. I guess some dealers still do but the salesman of this generation can’t work that like a tool.

    • @TupacAShakurAfeni
      @TupacAShakurAfeni Před 4 lety +5

      Thank you 80 KOL

    • @csick11
      @csick11 Před 4 lety +7

      Nope only half right

  • @sfbrown69
    @sfbrown69 Před 5 lety +5320

    The more you shop for a car, the more you like what you're already driving.

    • @ruinunes8251
      @ruinunes8251 Před 5 lety +141

      Steve Brown agree with you unless what you are already driving is a piece of junk. 😃

    • @mr.f4832
      @mr.f4832 Před 5 lety +25

      @@ruinunes8251 brother you know how true this is !!!!

    • @ruinunes8251
      @ruinunes8251 Před 5 lety +94

      Mr.F I know man. I’m looking for a car to replace my old tired civic, but the more I read about new cars the more I want to keep my old one.

    • @mr.f4832
      @mr.f4832 Před 5 lety +22

      @@ruinunes8251 im in a 2012 GTI but looking for a 2000 civic EK lol

    • @ruinunes8251
      @ruinunes8251 Před 5 lety +5

      Mr.F Nice. Go for it.

  • @whatsyourdealbruh
    @whatsyourdealbruh Před 5 lety +11677

    I walked into a dealership and told the sales guy that I was "going to buy a car today". When we couldn't reach a deal and I started to leave he said "I thought you said you were buying a car today." My reply was "I didn't say I was going to buy it here."

    • @robreeto
      @robreeto Před 5 lety +202

      Awesome!

    • @TranslatedAssumption
      @TranslatedAssumption Před 5 lety +363

      Ooooo big bad car buyer, why waste your time at that dealership then? Sounds like something a total db would do.

    • @rich17279
      @rich17279 Před 5 lety +464

      What music was playing in your head when you dreamt that scenario

    • @epiksar
      @epiksar Před 5 lety +64

      Ben Chesterman what does that have to do with this conversation?

    • @TheMagache
      @TheMagache Před 5 lety +367

      The key is to waste as as much of the salesman's time as possible. Drag the sale on for a month or 2.

  • @lonewanderer3603
    @lonewanderer3603 Před 2 lety +181

    When I bought my last car, I negotiated the price of the car first. I said I wasn't sure if I wanted to trade in or have 2 cars. I also had my own financing through a credit union. When it came to my trade, I had already decided I needed $6500. I asked for $8000. They told me they couldn't pay $8000 because they'd never sell it for $10,000. I stood up and said if I couldn't get $8000 I couldn't afford the vehicle and I might as well leave. He played the whole, "let me talk to the manager" schtick. He came back and I got $7200 for my trade.
    A week later, I got on their website and my car was listed at $11,500. These guys are snakes but it is possible to get a decent deal. I'd say the number one thing is, don't get emotional and don't let your excitement for a new car turn you into a sucker. Be prepared to leave. That paper isn't a contract so it means fuck all even if you initial it.

    • @michaelgarro1668
      @michaelgarro1668 Před 2 lety

      I went around to all the dealers around here collecting trade in offers for my truck. One dealer had the car I wanted, checked the VIN on KBB and saw it was priced 4k under market value (it's been on their lot for over 100 days), and when time came for trade in appraisal I told them 44k or Im outta here. They finally came back and said they could do 43k. Took the deal. The truck is listed for 45.5 and has been sitting on their lot for awhile now.

    • @shady9295
      @shady9295 Před rokem +4

      You think their not going to make a profit on a trade in? Do you not know how a business is ran? Plus if they had to do any work, routine maintenance, detail. Pay their workers , commission for the sales guy, pay the electric bill to keep all the lights on… and still make profit from that??

    • @trizzysmeez3698
      @trizzysmeez3698 Před rokem +3

      ​@Shady thank you brother. Somebody understands

    • @Itslewcario
      @Itslewcario Před rokem

      Bitches want shit for free 😭

    • @TriggaPapi24
      @TriggaPapi24 Před 10 měsíci +2

      It's not a snake deal. If you knew more about ACV value and clean trade retail fair market etc.... every dealership knows someone is gonna come in and negotiate price you set it for a fair price that way while it's being taxed on the lot you have aome room for error. Stop complaining about a profit the US moves on profits.
      There is a difference between getting ripped off and coming to an agreement.

  • @joethebar1
    @joethebar1 Před 2 lety +173

    My daughter learned the hard way a few weeks ago. I went with her and was not nice to anyone at the dealership, I knew she wasn’t getting a great deal but she didn’t care- she was happy enough.
    Fast forward a week- we were waxing her car and she popped the trunk, only to find some lug nuts in a package. She asked” what are these?” “ they’re the factory lug nuts; the dealer took them off and replaced them with locking ones.” I said “ remember those fees I was bitching about? The ones you said I was being unreasonable about? The dealer charged you $495 dollars for those... you could have bought them for $30 and did it yourself.” Point made. Mic drop. Suddenly, I’m a genius

    • @kookiemonsta6409
      @kookiemonsta6409 Před rokem +2

      Bro what was her reaction when you told her 🤣

    • @ThatsJustEric
      @ThatsJustEric Před rokem +5

      ​@@kookiemonsta6409 everybody clapped

    • @trizzysmeez3698
      @trizzysmeez3698 Před rokem +1

      🤔

    • @TriggaPapi24
      @TriggaPapi24 Před 10 měsíci +1

      I don't think you know what you just said 😂😂😂

    • @trizzysmeez3698
      @trizzysmeez3698 Před 10 měsíci

      You a jackass. Figured I'd come back here and tell you this. You have no clue what you are talking buddy

  • @jseden
    @jseden Před 4 lety +1094

    My grandfather always said "no one is doing you a favor by taking your money"

    • @buddyfennell4402
      @buddyfennell4402 Před 4 lety +11

      Love this

    • @jseden
      @jseden Před 4 lety +24

      Buddy Fennell thanks. definitely miss him.. he was also find of saying "and if a frog had wings, it wouldn't bump it's ass on the ground".. also "horsecock!" In place of bullshit. Retired army Colonel.. had a bunch of colorful sayings

    • @42lookc
      @42lookc Před 4 lety +4

      I've always said, "You can break even watching TV", meaning you won't get ripped off if you don't enter into any kind of agreement. I like your Grampa's version more.

    • @jseden
      @jseden Před 4 lety +1

      42lookc thanks! He was a smart guy and I'm grateful to have known him

    • @Quantum3691
      @Quantum3691 Před 4 lety

      @@jseden Yeah, I remember the "frog" phrase from the movie Raising Arizona with Nicholas Cage. "If a frog had wings, he wouldn't bump his ass-a-hoppin". 😂 Your grandpa was a classic old timer.

  • @robtk3
    @robtk3 Před 2 lety +70

    I love how it's all wine and roses with the salesman then, waterboarding and red hot pokers in the financing office.
    "You really need to seriously consider getting the extended warranty." "Why?! Are you selling me a piece of shit?!"
    The number one tip in a dealership; never hesitate to simply get up and walk out.

    • @dennismusgrove3824
      @dennismusgrove3824 Před 2 lety +4

      I've done exactly That, and the salesman call me on my cell phone min later when I was on the freeway and try to get me to come back to the dealership.

    • @benda777nba
      @benda777nba Před rokem +4

      I've only owned 2 vehicles in my driving years and have never bought them at a dealership; my Mexican dad says those are for suckers....I see now he was right all along....he didn't go to school but those street smarts win out in the end!

  • @JohnWick-yk3eg
    @JohnWick-yk3eg Před rokem +10

    I've been an auto mechanic for over 20 years. Many of the problems I see daily could have easily been avoided by simply following the vehicles maintenance schedule. I use a program on my computer called Automotive Wolf car care software to keep track of all the maintenance for my 3 cars, a truck and even a generator. It automatically can send you text message reminders when any type of service is due. Two of my vehicles have over 200,000 miles and have never needed any repairs. Want to save money? Follow your maintenance schedule!

  • @cranehead48
    @cranehead48 Před 4 lety +1109

    As soon as a salesman says,"I'm gonna be honest with you", RED FLAG!!!

    • @peterking2651
      @peterking2651 Před 4 lety +17

      Said every guy ”I won’t come in your mouth” (yeah I know about the spelling)

    • @ryanw.975
      @ryanw.975 Před 4 lety +12

      the signal salesman start lying

    • @keithjohnson4420
      @keithjohnson4420 Před 4 lety +15

      I always say that though and I don’t lie to my customers so should I change my whole vocabulary cause someone else screwed over a guy?

    • @cahivx
      @cahivx Před 4 lety +9

      Haha that implies you're not always honest?

    • @keithjohnson4420
      @keithjohnson4420 Před 4 lety

      Charles Hummer I am ? Like I really do try to help my customers out. I drive an hour to get to my job and love working there. It’s way better than being a factory supervisor like I was before. I think it depends whether your going to a big dealership or an independent dealership.

  • @ilovecokeslurpees
    @ilovecokeslurpees Před 3 lety +464

    Rules too buying a car (and I sold cars too unfortunately):
    1) Never take sticker price. That is never the real price.
    2) Buy in cash every time. Don't buy if you need to finance because that is a losing game. Leasing is by far worse.
    3) Find out the "X-pricing" or the manufacturer's buy back amounts. These are the amounts the dealer has from the manufacturer so they can profitably move vehicles from dealership to dealership and "x-pricing" is the pricing employees and fleets get. Use that as your leverage.
    4) Never trade in a vehicle. Sell your vehicle privately.
    5) 0% financing is not 0%. The bump up the price and bake in the cost of the interest. That is why they won't wiggle on the price of 0% or will wiggle very little.
    6) You should buy a used vehicle that is 2 to 4 years old that is in good condition. The majority of the value of the car is lost in the first 3 years of the vehicle from the moment you drive off the lot (driving it off the lot is the single biggest drop in value).
    7) If buying used, make sure it is in good condition from a third party.
    8) All new trucks have a minimum of 10,000 of wiggle room or at least 30% if it is a very cheap compact truck (like a Ranger).
    9) Always go to 3 dealerships minimum, if not more.
    10) Never buy from a luxury dealership unless you like buying sticker price (Lincoln, Lexus, Cadillac, Infiniti, Acura, Ferrarri, etc.).
    11) Japanese dealers are sticklers for forcing you to buy at MSRP or so close it is effectively MSRP. Screw them.
    12) If a salesman has been there for 3 or more years, they are professional sharks. Those are the pros at negotiating. Avoid them.
    13) Never buy anything after market from the dealer especially additional warranties or "care packages".
    14) Every salesman has a script and they follow it religiously, or know it well enough to hit the major beats to not appear they are following the script. It is all about getting your emotions up for the sale by test driving, building rapport, by presenting features, and then get you to sign as fast as possible. They are not your buddies: they are blood thirsty sharks.
    15) Every vehicle has their own buzzwords for features that are in every car in their segment. Things like "Ecoboost" and "AdvanceTrac". Read ahead of time of what the equivalent is in other vehicles. Salesmen love using these buzzwords to make you think that this vehicle is unique. It is not. It is the same as all of the others.
    16) Every used car has a minimum of 20% wiggle room in the price and probably more. Do your research first by checking Kelly's blue book, and the marketplace to see who is overinflated in price.
    17) Dealer's used vehicles are barely touched by the mechanics. Usually just detailed and cleaned which is cheap. If it is was a lease buy back, it will likely have problems.
    18) Most important because idiots argue with me on this all the time: leasing is the stupidest and most expensive way to buy a car. It is designed to get you into a car and pay enormous penalties at the end while still paying car payments on the most expensive part of the vehicle: the front end payments.

  • @pouryarezaeian2706
    @pouryarezaeian2706 Před 2 lety +75

    Easy ways to fix this.
    Always sell your own vehicle.
    If you can get your own financing
    And never look at montly payments, ALWAYS LOOK AT THE end price of the vehicle they are trying to sell you.
    Just today I went into a dealer and they literally refused to sell me a car when they knew they couldn’t scam me out.

    • @brianm.4243
      @brianm.4243 Před rokem +1

      I'm running into this now. Looking for a bigger vehicle to accommodate a bigger family and I go right past the monthly payments into price, or I figure out what the monthly payments add up to and adjust it down to whatever price I wanted plus reasonable interest. They dont budge and I just walk away. Used car prices are nuts right now.

    • @TheEllaTB
      @TheEllaTB Před rokem

      That's crazy! I noticed for a few years now that I have to really push to get a price for the vehicle and not a monthly payment number! So insulting and annoying

  • @petepyeatt6909
    @petepyeatt6909 Před 2 lety +37

    This dude is dropping all the secrets in the car selling trade.

  • @a3300000
    @a3300000 Před 5 lety +6336

    Never walk into a dealership unless you’re willing to walk out.

    • @6string327
      @6string327 Před 5 lety +143

      there instantly on you like sharks

    • @MeOhMyOh2324
      @MeOhMyOh2324 Před 5 lety +72

      We walk out every time and rarely trade a vehicle

    • @a3300000
      @a3300000 Před 5 lety +24

      Max Power you know your shit!

    • @Pfsif
      @Pfsif Před 5 lety +115

      Never buy unless the salesman and manager are screaming at you.

    • @a3300000
      @a3300000 Před 5 lety +26

      M Detlef , pure genius. Bet you paid sticker price.

  • @samg5543
    @samg5543 Před 4 lety +773

    You forgot to tell everyone to never trade-in a car. Sell it yourself and make a lot more money.

    • @jeremybuchanan289
      @jeremybuchanan289 Před 4 lety +35

      Not always possible when people are upside down.

    • @samg5543
      @samg5543 Před 4 lety +166

      @@jeremybuchanan289 if you're upside down in a car, you shouldn't be buying a new one.

    • @jeremybuchanan289
      @jeremybuchanan289 Před 4 lety +13

      @@samg5543 if only people lived that way, but they don't. Hell, moat people don't have cash to put down, trade, then are even worse off.

    • @lievaleo5746
      @lievaleo5746 Před 4 lety +22

      But if you trade in, you don't get hit with sales tax.

    • @samg5543
      @samg5543 Před 4 lety +36

      @@lievaleo5746 you will pay sales tax on the car you purchase.

  • @cdsilvermoon9140
    @cdsilvermoon9140 Před 2 lety +7

    I love how he called me an idiot and I smiled.

  • @ragnarflorida
    @ragnarflorida Před 2 lety +9

    Thank you. Every young person should watch this. I filed a lawsuit against a car dealer, he threatened me and had me followed. I posted it online, 9 other women came forward. A nightmare.

  • @deathwrenchcustom
    @deathwrenchcustom Před 4 lety +1014

    I went to a dealership a few years ago and told the salesman that I was just looking for a new toy. He asked what my budget was, and I said $30k max. I didn't mind doing that, because I know what cars are worth, and I've been around the block enough times that I'm not going to get suckered in. We ended up test-driving a 500hp supercharged Shelby Mustang that I KNEW was well over $30k, but I just wanted to see where this would go. Lol... so we sit down in his cube, and he tells me that he can get me into the car for $41k. He tried to pull all kinds of tricks to make me think that it wasn't that much different than $30k (you know, because numbers don't really MEAN anything...). I ended up walking out. He called me for like two weeks after that, and I finally told him, "Look, dude. I was ready to spend 30 grand on something I don't even need. You could have made an easy sale, but instead you got greedy. So now you don't get shit. And stop calling me." 😆

    • @WhiteBoardFinance
      @WhiteBoardFinance  Před 4 lety +38

      LOL

    • @johnlyn1
      @johnlyn1 Před 4 lety +79

      That's biggest problem with dealerships. Inexperienced sales people that never get proper training. You told him your budget and he's wasting time showing a car way above your budget. A good sales person would have never let you test drive a vehicle that was over your budget.

    • @IamBlackMagic03
      @IamBlackMagic03 Před 4 lety +47

      Had a similar experience. Saw a 2015 mustang gt with only 700 miles on it. I setup an appointment to test drive. I get there and they immediately have me test drive a brand new 2019 gt and a 2019 roush. I told him I wasn't here for that and he responds well we just want you to see what else was available. So I test drove them and when I was done he asked "so what do you think? Want to talk numbers?"... I said "yeah, on the 2015 i originally came to test drive! I can afford the other 2 but i dont want to pay that. So either give me numbers on the 2015gt or I'm out!". He realized their little try to up sale game wasnt working and threw away the numbers he had the finance guy work up while I was test driving the other two. I think he realized I was on the verge of getting pissed off so tightened up and finally let me test drive the 2015 and gave me numbers on it.

    • @johnlyn1
      @johnlyn1 Před 4 lety +10

      @@IamBlackMagic03 The funny thing is he was actually down selling you as far it effects the dealership because there is more profit on used than new. They may have had the Roush marked up but the new 2019 GT would have made them nothing since those are a dime a dozen and have little mark up. Used is where they make the money. On average dealers lose between $100 to $200 per new car. They can make an average of $2,000 to $3,000 on used cars. By having you drive new over the used one you were interested in, the salesman was costing himself money where had you bought the new he would have only made his mini deal which ranges between $75 to $150 commission depending on dealership vs an average of 25% commission on $2,000 to $3,000 on used where he could make $500 to $750 commission selling the used vs a mini deal making between $75 to $150 selling the used. Just another case on an inexperienced sales person that was never properly trained.

    • @algallego
      @algallego Před 4 lety +46

      @@johnlyn1 Realtors do the exact same thing to homebuyers. Their goal is to drain you of every last penny they can squeeze from your pre-approved lender amount. If you can afford $500K, don't tell them that, if you want a house for $300K; tell them that $300K is your absolute ceiling. Just because you are lender pre-approved for a certain amount, don't max it out, that's just as dumb as maxing out your credit cards for the next 15-30 years and only making monthly payments! Every deal is designed to enslave you for the longest term possible to milk you for everything you're worth to the dealer during that negotiation.

  • @jashton8710
    @jashton8710 Před 4 lety +787

    None of the dealerships I dealt with used the 4 square method....they used the all-the-numbers-mixed-up-in-a-single-column-so-I-couldn't-tell-what-was-going-on method. Equally effective.

  • @krunkjuice2069
    @krunkjuice2069 Před 2 lety +47

    As a former salesman, If you do decide to finance a car, don’t focus on the payments. They will distract you with what you want your payments to be but never drop the actual sticker price down.

    • @Jodyjo99
      @Jodyjo99 Před rokem +4

      So you already made all your money and trying to fuck over everybody else getting into the car business by telling people they’re all trying to scam you, ect. Maybe a small amount of salesman are pos but majority are just trying to feed their family like everybody else. Salesman also need to make money.

    • @romanshevy257
      @romanshevy257 Před rokem +12

      @@Jodyjo99 they need to go do something that’s actually beneficial to society then.

    • @Jodyjo99
      @Jodyjo99 Před rokem

      @@romanshevy257 lmfaoo the stupidity in that comment is comedy🤦🏽‍♂️😂 giving people something they’ve dreamed of for a good price while also helping the salesmen out isn’t beneficial for both parties? Dude you probably work at a grocery store or some shit stop acting like you’re saving the world with your job

  • @GratefulPrimate
    @GratefulPrimate Před 2 lety +29

    Thank you for this, it was helpful.
    But I REALLY hate these stupid negotiating games we have to endure just to get a vehicle, mainly just to go back and forth to our jobs.

  • @Diosa468
    @Diosa468 Před 3 lety +172

    "My manager is in a good mood, he's a great guy" HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA YES!!! THEY DO SAY THAT!!! thanks for the honesty!

    • @MrMbc2013
      @MrMbc2013 Před 2 lety +4

      When they say my managers in a good mood, we as the customer should interrupt and say does that mean I’ll be getting the car for free.

  • @daviddubinsky868
    @daviddubinsky868 Před 4 lety +115

    Went to a dealer last week. The finance guy offered me a loan at $350/mo. I asked what the interest rate was. As if it didn't matter he said the rate was 5 or 6%. I told him my credit union already approved me at 3.25%. He said "oh, I can do that".

    • @alvinsimba734
      @alvinsimba734 Před 3 lety

      @Simon I think the dude above meant a year older than the new one for example 2020.instead of.2021.

    • @triplegt6
      @triplegt6 Před 3 lety +12

      Never Ever finance through the dealership. They will get deals with banks, and then add points on the interest rate. Always get pre approval from your bank or credit union before going to buy , then finance through them !

    • @dianatamayo5089
      @dianatamayo5089 Před 3 lety

      I did the same and I was like lower a car from 18 to 15

  • @endqualifiedimmunity754
    @endqualifiedimmunity754 Před 2 lety +5

    If they "go to see the manager" and make you wait for 20 minutes... leave!!! I waited at a doctor's office once for over an hour. Few days later that doctor came into the bank that I manage asking to send a wire. I made him wait for an hour and a half. When we finally sent his wire, I came out from my corner office and whispered in his ear "remember me? Your time is not more valuable than mine"

  • @dmayer50
    @dmayer50 Před 2 lety +28

    Just told a dealer that our bank was going to finance with us and their faces said it all. They went so far as to say that they’d have to keep the vehicle for 10 days for the check to clear and they still have the option to sell it during that time. Told this to our bank and they never heard such a thing

    • @googiegress7459
      @googiegress7459 Před rokem +1

      I had to read that second sentence twice because I couldn't understand it. That's wild. If I buy the car and sign on the dotted line, it's a sealed deal and neither of us can get out of it.

  • @robinkhaira1
    @robinkhaira1 Před 4 lety +174

    and one golden rule, if something doesn't feel right, dont be afraid to walk away. Remember, they need you more than you need them. you as a customer have the power.

    • @WhiteBoardFinance
      @WhiteBoardFinance  Před 4 lety +8

      agreed

    • @robinkhaira1
      @robinkhaira1 Před 4 lety +15

      @@iamnormal8648 as long as you know their tricks, you can beat this game. here are few tips:
      1. Never tell them that you want a specific car. always make it look like you don't care what you buy as long as you have reliable car. even if you are a car enthusiast. that keeps them on the edge because they are thinking that you can change your mind.
      2. Always tell them you are only here for quote because you are going to check out another couple of cars from a different manufacturer and you ll make you decision based on that. Then they know you will walk away to look at the car and once you are outta that door they have no control over the situation, so they ll bend backwards to keep you in their store. ( this is the best one because i have used it many times when i went to negotiate with my friends).
      3.always arrange your own finance before you go in, but don't tell them that you already have it sorted. because otherwise they ll start to adjust to that straight away. listen to their offer and if you feel like you are ok with the vehicle price, then just tell them you have your own finance.
      4. Be friendly, but keep some barrier between the salesman, because they ll try to act like they are your friends, make them work hard for your "trust" question anything if you need to. remember they need "You" to spend your money so they can get their Fat paycheck.

    • @robinkhaira1
      @robinkhaira1 Před 4 lety +3

      @@iamnormal8648 Also try to see if you can get a good 2nd hand car privately, because a new car is always going to lose money. i have been changing and upgrading my cars almost every year. its my 9th car in 11 years and i always get a 2nd hand car below market value form someone wanting to sell it quickly. it could be that they are moving away or they have other various reasons. so if you can get a car lower than the average price privately, you can potentially upgrade your car every couple of years and still sell yours on a good price since you brought is cheaper to start it.
      it is a bit of work and requires hunting. but with time and patience it works. just cut dealers out of equation all together

    • @Jasonk1979
      @Jasonk1979 Před 4 lety +4

      It never feels right at a car dealership.

    • @michaelbuffington4047
      @michaelbuffington4047 Před 4 lety

      Just be upfront and honest about what you want done. Don’t let the salesman shoot in the dark.

  • @bahopik
    @bahopik Před 4 lety +832

    Never met this guy, but he just called me an idiot

  • @jg7286
    @jg7286 Před 2 lety +14

    There should be a one semester course in high school 1 hour per school day about basics like this. Thanks for sharing the truth

  • @lwelch1498
    @lwelch1498 Před 4 lety +163

    You just described every car buying experience I ever had. "My manager is in a good mood today." 😂

  • @flossbee
    @flossbee Před 4 lety +266

    Nothing beats the relief and sense of empowerment when you have a well functioning vehicle with no car payment!

    • @ZeiGgyzeigthekingart
      @ZeiGgyzeigthekingart Před 4 lety +4

      Thoroughly agreed!

    • @isaacleedrums
      @isaacleedrums Před 4 lety +22

      I would say a paid for home would rival that.

    • @tayloranderson456
      @tayloranderson456 Před 4 lety +13

      I'd take good health over that any day!

    • @helamana
      @helamana Před 4 lety +1

      Walked in in September, test drive 2017 Beamer...1 hour later drove out ... paid in full. The guy who dealt with us tried his very best to push tire maintenance, while car service for 2 years etc etc etc...altogether would have added $3 Grand to the price we bought the car...with taxes and everything, we walked out $1,400 more with taxes and registration and whatever else!!!! They were mad

    • @HeyItsAvi90
      @HeyItsAvi90 Před 4 lety +7

      I was sooooo happy i got declined buying a 2019 Honda accord for 26k because i just moved to the US and had 640 credit score with 6 months credit history. Now im driving a 2014 fully functional toyota corolla LE i bought and haggled for 6.5k from this guy with clean title and single owner.

  • @markzachenberg2797
    @markzachenberg2797 Před rokem +1

    Traded in a hard driven, cracked windshield, missing trim stained carpet, bald tires, missed services basically very poorly maintained car and the dealer gave me a remarkable trade-in deal on the same vehicle but a newer model. The new vehicle was a one-price with a 5-day lowest price guarantee. They put numbers down on paper, I asked for a specific APR, they worked in a number within 0.5% of my request, then off to financing. I said no in advance to everything except for gap insurance. Bought the car for a smaller down and monthly payment than my calculations before visiting the dealership. I'm still in denial that I might have gotten an outstanding deal, lots of credit to this video for helping me prepare.

  • @DaljitSingh
    @DaljitSingh Před 2 lety +16

    Thanks Marko, we always did the things you mentioned but not in such detail. Thank you, we know it takes lots of time in making and editing these videos, appreciate your free knowledge.

  • @SuperDEADPOOP
    @SuperDEADPOOP Před 4 lety +228

    I left the dealership this week when he tried to tell me that the price of the truck doesn’t matter, the monthly payment is what matters! That’s when I told him we’re done.

    • @GuyHarvey182
      @GuyHarvey182 Před 4 lety +4

      Well it’s true only worry about it if you’re going to buy it cash.

    • @julioa.1375
      @julioa.1375 Před 4 lety +21

      @@GuyHarvey182 so you walk in knowing your max monthly budget is $1k and want to buy a truck with a price tag of $62k and they tell you that its 0.00% interest for 72 months with a monthly payment of $1,000 just like you wanted so you are telling me that the cost of the vehicle doesn't matter cuz now you are getting ripped off for $10,000

    • @Nananadadadawoo
      @Nananadadadawoo Před 4 lety +11

      Julio Almaraz like the video said people with half a brain lol

    • @henryhonda8408
      @henryhonda8408 Před 4 lety +2

      If a person can't multiply 72 X 1..... he DESERVES to get ripped off for $10,000. With a copy of the bill of sales you could take it to court and have the salesman's sorry ass thrown in jail for fraud. But I can't believe any salesperson could possibly put something this rediculous on paper.

    • @khalidsyoung
      @khalidsyoung Před 4 lety

      The price of the truck matters if your buying cash, why fight for a tiny amount of money off when your financing ? , make sure the monthly payment is right, it fits into your budget and you account for things like insurance. If you do your research and have proof on why your asking for a discount and not pulling it out your ass then 99% of dealers will happily give the discount.

  • @simonbramwell4074
    @simonbramwell4074 Před 4 lety +550

    Just remember these dealership guys do this several times a day, but you probably only do it once every few years. They get a lot more practice than you do. Beware.

    • @WhiteBoardFinance
      @WhiteBoardFinance  Před 4 lety +24

      true

    • @jasonwenzel3386
      @jasonwenzel3386 Před 4 lety +10

      Kinda like a Vegas casino...

    • @sammyfromsydney
      @sammyfromsydney Před 4 lety +17

      Don't let them pressure you into signing same day. They'll be just as willing to sell you a car tomorrow and if they aren't you can go elsewhere.

    • @abdulrennane9876
      @abdulrennane9876 Před 4 lety +3

      I am nasty in math

    • @JoeyGFPV
      @JoeyGFPV Před 4 lety +2

      Alot more practice. And beleive they are better at it than you.

  • @oneofthepeopleintheback5645

    Not only that... simply multiply the monthly payment by the term length to see how much in interest you are forking over.... It will open your eyes as you will see you've pretty much bought a compact car with the interest alone!

  • @123hotdog111
    @123hotdog111 Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you Marko for this video. I don't buy trucks often but I have this video saved and every single time one of my friends talks about buying a car, I send them this video.

  • @coffeebeardtv
    @coffeebeardtv Před 4 lety +319

    When car dealerships can’t screw over the customer, they screw over the sales rep.

    • @Mastercorey001
      @Mastercorey001 Před 4 lety +10

      Could not have been said better.

    • @King_Marzz
      @King_Marzz Před 4 lety +12

      True. They meaning sales manager

    • @budweiserbundy1525
      @budweiserbundy1525 Před 4 lety +6

      Freditasium YES FUCKING SIR. FUCK WORKING IN THE CAR TRADE.

    • @antoniokeck
      @antoniokeck Před 4 lety +26

      True....but not the customers problem...

    • @williambrown3388
      @williambrown3388 Před 4 lety +32

      They signed up for the whole tour. No tears for them. They take the commissions without any qualms they can take the screwing equally.

  • @luke6350
    @luke6350 Před 4 lety +638

    Tim Tebow sure is knowledgeable about cars

  • @mrspeeddemon727
    @mrspeeddemon727 Před 2 lety +5

    This video is 2 years old now but I can not express enough his advise to go get pre-approval at a good bank or credit union FIRST before going to a car dealership. It works.

    • @michaelmclain7049
      @michaelmclain7049 Před rokem

      Do you get pre approval for a specific amount first? Or do you find the car you want and then approach the credit union?

  • @GanNiPiYan
    @GanNiPiYan Před 2 lety +23

    I was a car salesman before I had my own Bubble Tea business, I have to say this video is the most accurate realization of what I did everyday as a salesman. I can see how my customers' brains struggle and overcome the emotions when they buy cars. I will only be buying cars with cash from now on.

  • @mauriceclark290
    @mauriceclark290 Před 4 lety +1350

    9.7K dislikes are from dealership agents or people that just bought new cars
    Thx for the likes

    • @eyeofhoruswadjet4236
      @eyeofhoruswadjet4236 Před 4 lety +10

      Or people who got "took"

    • @aboadeko805
      @aboadeko805 Před 4 lety +5

      Yes bcus this guy is piece of shit bcus he also was doing it before!!! His such an idiot for this video..

    • @IndianaJoe0321
      @IndianaJoe0321 Před 4 lety +26

      Tell us how you really feel, @@aboadeko805

    • @aeksinsang932
      @aeksinsang932 Před 4 lety +1

      Maurice Clark true that

    • @aeksinsang932
      @aeksinsang932 Před 4 lety +10

      Abo Adeko he’s not black, so he doesn’t steal cars like you.

  • @eXGaming4u
    @eXGaming4u Před 5 lety +201

    I've bought cars for many ppl in my family and I truly believe I got better deals than most folks can. Never trade-in a car at the dealership. Sell the car privately, take that money and use that towards down payment. You're somewhat right on most of these Marko. But I'll give some more pointers:
    1. Do thorough research on the car you want to buy. Compare prices between dealers and private sale price for that car. By this time, you should get a ballpark idea of overpriced and good priced deals.
    2. I'm going to argue with Marko about "bring your own financing". That doesn't work anymore as most dealership can beat your own finance and use that against you. Ex: You bring your pre-approval that's 4.5% APR. Dealers probably would have given you 2.9% but now since they saw your 4.5%, they'll offer you 4% and say we can give you a better interest rate than your bank!
    3. However, do get pre-approved to see if you qualify but keep that to yourself. (carry the pre-approval with you and use it in the END if dealers won't give you better APR)
    4. Go to dealership END of the month... maybe last 2-3 days of the month because they are desperate to meet their sales goal.
    5. Do not go on WEEKENDS, go on a rainy weekday where there won't be much customers. Which means they need the sale.
    6. Like Marko said, never negotiate "monthly payment", negotiate the price of the car. if you done your research, you should already know how much your monthly cost would be.
    7. Haggle them in every situation. Offer low price, offer Drive-out price (out-the-door).
    8. If they don't give you the car for the price you are asking and you want to agree to what they offered, say "OK, I'll accept that ONLY if you include.. XXXX. That means you can ask for extended warranty, 1-year maintenance, accessories..etc..whatever you want, try to get them with the included price.
    9. Never be afraid to WALK-OUT of the deal if they don't accept your price. Either they'll call you back or you'll lose the deal. You'll find same or better deal elsewhere.
    10. You control them, they do NOT control you. remember that. You're the one with the power.
    One last thing, dealership does LOSE money sometimes. They'll sell some cars on negative to meet sales goal and quotas. So yes, you can get an amazing deal!

    • @Newzchspy
      @Newzchspy Před 5 lety

      eX.Gaming I agree, but at times, trading in can save substantially on taxes since you'll save that $$ off the new car purchase. Do the math before hand. This is particularly true if you're in a high tax state where taxes on new purchase can be 7% or higher. But the key is to discuss and disclose trade , if you go this route , well after you've locked in price of new car.

    • @pierrelarocque3214
      @pierrelarocque3214 Před 5 lety +3

      You should publish a CZcams video, it would be better than the one above

    • @band586
      @band586 Před 5 lety

      Thanks, for advice. I’m thinking about going to buy a car next month!

    • @bluecollartrader1791
      @bluecollartrader1791 Před 5 lety

      That's true on used cars. on new cars, the dealer is paying interest to the manufacturer as if they own that vehicle on their lot. As the interest costs climb, they have to get back that money they've paid in interest to the car company by way of a higher sales price, giving them less room to make a great deal. It's a double edged sword.@MissBttrsctch

    • @TommyT_
      @TommyT_ Před 5 lety +1

      Buddy, every deal is important whether it's the busiest day of the year or the quietest

  • @lebarosky
    @lebarosky Před 2 lety +1

    I used to represent auto dealerships. What this boils down to is: buy a car from a dealership. Do not buy insurance or money from a dealership. Nothing. Just the car. So, get a loan before you go shopping. Get your warranties and insurance on the open market from reputable sellers. The only warranty worth getting is on a new car, from the manufacturer. Other than prescription drugs in the USA, the biggest markup on the planet is the premium on any sort of insurance you get from a car dealer.

  • @kaitkutie2
    @kaitkutie2 Před 2 lety +1

    LOL I was just at the dealership getting some car service done and then this video pops up on my YT feed. THANK YOU for the transparency. I have bought two cars from dealerships and this is exactly the process they put you through. I did recognize some mistakes that I have made, but I really do enjoy having my extended warranty. ESP since my car was the first of its model. That security. I will take your advice for the future. *subscribed

  • @BlackJambaPlaysDota
    @BlackJambaPlaysDota Před 4 lety +303

    Well this man just insulted me several times in this video. I think I'm going to give him a like.

    • @WhiteBoardFinance
      @WhiteBoardFinance  Před 4 lety +59

      I have your best interest in mind. Tough love

    • @melindago6576
      @melindago6576 Před 4 lety +4

      Lol 😂

    • @TeslaBoy123
      @TeslaBoy123 Před 3 lety +10

      Lol I smell u a car sales man 🤣🤣🤣

    • @nickycox9296
      @nickycox9296 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm a salesman and can tell you this buying a car is no different than going to Wal mart and buying food or clothes. They just like any store are open to make money. The car world is not what it was 20 years ago before internet.

    • @johnnygeejr500
      @johnnygeejr500 Před 2 lety

      @@nickycox9296 .........nick want to buy a bridge ? your pants on fire !

  • @jabber8217
    @jabber8217 Před 5 lety +756

    Been in the business for 26 years. While the 4 square is old style of selling, it still happens. And it is designed to beat the 5% of customers not educated enough to see through the crap. As soon as the salesperson or manager presents anything that looks like this, get up and leave. Go home and visit 3 dealers via internet and get your pricing that way. Beware if one guy is thousands lower than the other two guys, he is probably just trying to get you in the door. Then use an online calculator to figure payments. This is not a difficult process.
    I also see a bunch of comments telling people to sell their car on their own. This is generally a smart way to do it. But there are two things to watch out for. If you car is junk, just trade it in. You don't want or need strangers calling you at all hours of the night and day. Think of your safety. Too dangerous in this world now. Besides, let the dealer take the responsibility for anything that is wrong. If you sell a car that "unknowingly" has a bad trans and someone just shelled out their last $2,500 to buy it, you can bet you will be getting a call from that person. No dealership in the world is going to call you after the fact and want money from you because the used car manager missed the bad transmission. Second, if you decide to sell private party, make sure you get enough over the dealership offer to cover the loss of taxes. When you trade in (in most states), you will also get a tax credit for that amount. $10k car traded in is worth $10,700 private party if you have a tax rate of 7%. I saw someone get $30,000 for their car from me only to sell it private party for $31,000 and think they won. At 7% tax, they just lost $1,100 (tax savings on $30k is $2,100).
    85% of all salespeople out there are decent guys and gals. If they are transparent with their dealings, and are willing to answer questions and back up their statements with solid math, there is no reason to not trust them. The really smart ones will be honest. I can sell one person, rip them off, and make a bunch for myself. Or I can take very good care of them, make a little, but then sell the wife, the children, the neighbor, the boss, and even their vet and make a lot more doing it the honest way. And now I have 5 more people passing along my name instead of one going on facebook and bashing me.

    • @ivetg.420
      @ivetg.420 Před 5 lety +35

      Honest sales men are rare! What a gem you are! Hahaha

    • @MyBodyWash
      @MyBodyWash Před 5 lety +17

      Jabber 82 you should come out to Dallas and preach this. Here all car salesman are pretty much.. well.. just salesman

    • @jonothandoeser
      @jonothandoeser Před 5 lety +9

      It's GOTTA be more than 5%

    • @gmb858
      @gmb858 Před 5 lety +38

      Good advice. I graduated in 1973 with a bachelors in Finance, spent 26 years in commercial leasing and lending, then went into subprime auto finance for one of the largest banks in the world for 12 years working with Finance Managers at Dealerships. I'd buy their sales contracts, administer the loan and collect the money, repo it if necessary. I've been retired 10 years and the market has changed because both the manufacturers and dealers have more difficulty moving cars. AlMOST EVERY CAR PHYSICALLY IS BEAT TO DEATH AND HAS NO VALUE AT 84 MONTHS (except for granddad's) It was a stretch at 72 months but the only way to get a payment the customer can afford has been to extend the term of the loan. That means the customer is paying the same rate of interest for 7 years.
      Auto Finance dealers will accept the trade in as the "down" unless the total of the customer's payments on the trade in car's financing are greater than the Kelly Blue Book Wholesale Value. If that occurs, the customer is "upside down" and he is severely limited in the "amount of car " he can buy. If the trade is used for down, then lenders look at 15-20% of the "if sold" price of the car to be purchased. If you go on Kelly Blue Book dot com and plug in your car's information, they will ask you questions about the condition of your car. They rate it from Excellent down to poor. You'll have a better idea of what the dealer will offer based on the Kelly number. If you have a "beater" car, good luck.
      When a customer drives into the dealership he may see 1000 cars on the lot. The salesman will qualify him on monthly payment. Let's say it's $400. That means the customer will have a selection of maybe 10-20 cars on the lot that the salesman will try to sell him. if the car lot has 7 used Ford Escorts and 2 used Toyota Corollas, the salesman is going to push him to the Ford Escort. Another factor that determines which car the customer sees is the length of time it has been on the lot. If its been there 60 days the sales manager is breathing down the necks of his people. If the car has been there 30 days, not so much.
      Based on the credit and payment history of the borrower, an auto finance company will pay from 100% to 120% of the "if sold price" to the dealer. This will cover tax, title and license for the car. The Auto Finance guy will try to sell a Guaranteed Asset Protection Contract or GAP which will pay off the car if you are hit by an uninsured motorist and/or don't have adequate coverage from your insurance company. In some instances, this is not a bad idea if you have a large sales price on a big SUV or a large payment. Some insurance won't pay sufficient amounts to pay off the loan and you're left with the remainder. The Finance Guy will also try to sell a service warranty that will cover certain expensive repair items. The older the car, the closer the attention to making a decision on it should be made. Don't buy "premium lug nuts," "competition floor mats" or "chrome muffler bearings." These are add-on aftermarket profit centers for the dealership. The finance company won't finance them.
      Read your contract before you sign. Ask questions if you don't understand. The Finance guy will be pissed off but he's making money on you so be ready to walk if you don't like anything. DON'T GIVE THEM THE KEYS TO YOUR TRADE IN UNTIL YOU'VE SIGNED THE NEW CONTRACT AND HAVE KEYS TO THE NEW CAR. If the dealer has possession of your car it puts them in the position to put max pressure on you to close the deal regardless of how bad it is for you. They are adept at ripping arms and legs off of customers.
      Your credit score will drive your interest rate. The auto finance companies send out "programs" with rate sheets and terms and conditions, advance % and other things that could determine where the auto finance manager sends your deal for pre approval. No matter what the call back is, the finance manager is trained to call the auto finance company to "rehash" the deal. Finance manager training courses spend an entire morning on the rehash call. So, those guys are loaded for bear when they call back. The auto finance manager might put your pre-approval out to 4 or 5 different lenders, depending on program fit and the lender's appetite. Sometimes if a dealer has sold too many deals to a lender that go bad and the car is repossessed, then the finance companies get skittish. Lending company reps are in and out of dealers several times a week structuring deals with them. The dealer says in placing deals, "I'll give you these 5 premium deals but you have to take these 2 dogs along with them." There is a lot of give and take that is always changing.
      Bottom line, be happy with the deal you buy along with the car you buy. You will have them for at least 3 years (average time between trades) and if either one of them is bad for you, it will grind on you every time you turn the ignition.

    • @goneflying140
      @goneflying140 Před 5 lety +46

      You mentioned that a dealership would never call you back on your trade and say something about the condition after the deal. I had one do just that. I traded in a Camaro that had cat claw scratches all over the hood, roof, and decklid. It looked really bad, except when it was wet. You couldn't even see them if it was raining. I had my eye on a Trans Am, and the salesman was calling me daily and bugging me to come in and do a deal. I waited until it was raining, and they gave me what I thought was fair on the trade, so I made the deal and drove away in my new (used) Trans Am. The next day when it had quit raining, that jerk actually called me and told me "hey, this car is all scratched up. You need to come back in so we can re-negotiate the deal because I am going to lose on this trade... I told him I was having buyers remorse, (really wasnt.. I loved my Trans Am...) and if I came back in, I would likely give him the Trans Am back. He said I couldn't do that because I signed the contract. So I told him to go "F" himself. It felt good to get one over on them for once, even though I am sure they still made a bunch of money even with a loss on the trade.

  • @stevedockery3534
    @stevedockery3534 Před 2 lety +2

    Another great informative video Mark. I can see where the buyer should focus and also where the salesman will focus. Makes a lot of sense. Thanks, Steve in FL

  • @SpeakingTruth99999
    @SpeakingTruth99999 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Excellent overview!! I bought my last car and worked off out the door price. Took doing lots of homework before walking in the dealership but avoided all the drama explained in the video. Keep making the awesome videos bro!!

  • @insidmal
    @insidmal Před 5 lety +64

    It always amazed me how people will argue over $1,000 on the listed price of a car but just accept whatever interest rate is given to them.

    • @KidGloves2112
      @KidGloves2112 Před 5 lety

      If you have the cash to buy the car today, sometimes it worth getting a loan at the dealership with a higher interest rate but with added incentives to bring the price of the car down and just pay the loan off the following month.

  • @saxopio6280
    @saxopio6280 Před 5 lety +17

    In 2015 for the first time I went directly through my credit union to purchased a used car. Called them up, gave them the car details, and within 10 minutes I was approved with the lowest interest rate I'd ever had on a car note. I went to pick up the check the next business day. Handed it to the dealership finance manager and only had to wait around to fill out paperwork for tags/title and get my car detailed. The most hassle-free and worry-free car-buying experience I ever had, and this was my 8th car.

  • @mackattack2189
    @mackattack2189 Před rokem +2

    Thank you for your honesty and help

  • @ashyelbos
    @ashyelbos Před 2 lety +2

    Great job, thanks for the information

  • @reedrobb
    @reedrobb Před 4 lety +68

    Marko, I agree with everything you say here- I spent a year at a dealership and saw this too. However, I studied Advertising in my business degree and learned this process is all about EMOTION. If you go to buy a car and you are emotionally invested, all these tricks from the dealer will work on you. My #1 rule in buying cars is to be ready to WALK no matter what they do. EMOTIONS= EASY SALE

    • @DedeontheGo
      @DedeontheGo Před 4 lety

      I was definitely able to walk when my price wasn't right even with the boss coming in lol I was like well if its meant for me It will be here and I drove off

    • @jeremypenn1
      @jeremypenn1 Před rokem

      Tried to walk one time, but then my car wouldn't start in the dealer's parking lot...

    • @michaelmclain7049
      @michaelmclain7049 Před rokem

      @@jeremypenn1 😂😂😂

  • @manuelcastro6975
    @manuelcastro6975 Před 4 lety +349

    I remember buying my car 2 years ago, out the door price 32,290. Come signing papers, it was 35,000. I asked the dealer what happened, he said " oh the taxes and fees blah blah", and I did the math right in front of him and showed him it didn't add up and he left and returned with the correct amount.

    • @DiamondEdwards
      @DiamondEdwards Před 4 lety +42

      Glad you didn't fall for it! Good for you but I bet they get a lot of people with that one. SMH

    • @Threedaysextension
      @Threedaysextension Před 3 lety +30

      Same happened to me. That's why you always check what you are signing, because they get tricky with price

    • @Lodeenie
      @Lodeenie Před 3 lety +35

      Yes I got screwed too. I've been looking over my paperwork on my current car and it has the wrong interest rate and the base price was higher than what I saw online. I had no idea they would screw me like that. Lesson learned.

    • @cfoster6804
      @cfoster6804 Před 3 lety +1

      Wow!

    • @dr1flush
      @dr1flush Před 3 lety +17

      A car I like 26500 on sticker . Then they want 30020 after all is done and less then half on KBB on trade in . That's why Mercedes dealer make 100k plus a year. Biggest waste of money

  • @garycline937
    @garycline937 Před 2 lety +4

    Man this was phenomenal information to help in the future. Thank you very much for putting this video out there. I wish I had seen it 2 and a half months ago when I traded out of a lease and into a purchase, but you earned a subscribe from me sir. Also I'm from Akron myself so I support local people

  • @jennifer15497
    @jennifer15497 Před 2 lety +2

    YOU ARE A HOMIE. We love you so much. Always hated this process, but love your attitude and perspective haha.
    Thank you very much for being honest with this process and for making this video. Subscribed!

  • @nineseven5252
    @nineseven5252 Před 4 lety +587

    Keep negotiating until you get the car for free plus the candy bowl they have on their desks

    • @theroddimus
      @theroddimus Před 4 lety +10

      I dare you to go into business and sell everything for free and see how long you are in business. Good luck!!

    • @val13c59
      @val13c59 Před 4 lety +2

      Magic Banana Gamer the candy comes with the price of a toothache.

    • @hippiechick3210
      @hippiechick3210 Před 4 lety +6

      Lmfao 😂🤣😭 that would be nice... haha

    • @RealEstateClub-
      @RealEstateClub- Před 4 lety +12

      @@theroddimus Ninesven is just kidding. You simply walk out if you don't get the deal you want. No biggie

    • @ShakespeareCafe
      @ShakespeareCafe Před 4 lety +1

      H.I.L.L.A.R.I.O.U.S.!

  • @HatedJared
    @HatedJared Před 4 lety +221

    I worked as a banker for 9 months and we had a similar sales approach to our loans and credit cards. I hated it so much. Guess I didnt have the fortitude to knowingly rip old or broke people off. I quit.

    • @stoneyj1a1
      @stoneyj1a1 Před 4 lety +6

      gosh, my banker is trying to sell us a line of credit and company credit card now. they're relentless.

    • @romeg9893
      @romeg9893 Před 4 lety +1

      They're all brokers aka sales agents and the only lender is you because it's your signature on the promissory note, the Banksters never sign to be liable for anything. The dealer is going to transfer aka sell/assign your documents and promissory note aka bond over to the Banksters who are really brokerage insurance/assurance companies calling themselves investors. It's all fraud!!!

    • @TheChrismaster619
      @TheChrismaster619 Před 4 lety +7

      Good ,your integrity as a person is more important than any money on the world

    • @roseadams563
      @roseadams563 Před 4 lety

      @@romeg9893 gtfkdfggdgmfshi

    • @rjayp5843
      @rjayp5843 Před 4 lety +2

      You earn my respect man!

  • @dguisinger
    @dguisinger Před 2 lety +4

    I worked on the systems for a large dealership chain in Minnesota. Their system was designed to run a credit check, get financing offers from a few different lenders, and present the financing that was best for the dealer, not the customer.

  • @ingridperez238
    @ingridperez238 Před rokem +2

    Great video! Thank you so much. Very helpful as I am preparing to make a vehicle purchase when the time is right as I just saw your most recent video about the car repos exploding. Thank you for your content!

  • @JoseCortez-pm1xr
    @JoseCortez-pm1xr Před 4 lety +56

    I’ve never laughed so hard by being called an idiot

    • @YouTube_Enjoyerlol
      @YouTube_Enjoyerlol Před 3 lety +2

      He calls you an idiot then you hit like and subscribe. It’s the way the universe works... 😂

  • @cpad007
    @cpad007 Před 5 lety +850

    Negotiate the cost of the car only. Sell a trade-in outside the dealership. Finance outside the dealership.

    • @y_rb4080
      @y_rb4080 Před 5 lety +23

      Yup never trade in.

    • @2010drive
      @2010drive Před 5 lety +32

      ​@@y_rb4080 I've traded many vehicles for more than I could have sold privately. People need financing and dealers don't verify income like credit unions so they have a much larger buyer pool than any private seller.

    • @y_rb4080
      @y_rb4080 Před 5 lety +7

      @@2010drive Totally makes sense and I agree. Im just saying you could most probably sell a vehicle at a higher price point compared to the one offered by a dealership by a trade in if you have the patience to wait it out.

    • @2001chevycamaross
      @2001chevycamaross Před 5 lety +24

      yes, no, yes
      Ive traded in lots of car for close to or actual price of a private party sale. the trick is lots of research, know how much your car is worth and know how much the car you want is worth. Some states have tax advantages to trading in too. In nj, you only pay tax on the difference between the price of the car your buying and trade in. So, I purchase a car for 40k and trade a car for 30k. That 30k saved me 2100 in taxes. So, I would have to sell that car privately for 32.1k just to break even. That isnt including the time and cost of trying to sell the car. On that car, i also paid 500 under invoice for an indemand car that I factory ordered and waited 8 weeks for it to be built. That same car I traded in for 30k was on lots with an asking price of 34 to 35k. So, who would spend 32 or 33k privately for a car that is advertised at 34 for 35k...especially when I cant finance someone. Sure, they could jump through hoops with a local credit union for financing private party sales, but if your savvy enough to do that, you know most dealers will match or beat that rate.
      so yes, negotiate the total price, trade minus price of car, trade in if it makes sense, sell privately if it makes sense and get financing outside of the dealership and let the dealership beat that rate.

    • @bookshelffury
      @bookshelffury Před 5 lety +88

      Id feel bad selling a lemon to a private party. But trading in a lemon to a dealership no regrets fuk em

  • @nevanread
    @nevanread Před 2 lety +2

    I bought a Tesla and I completely avoided all of this Bs. Best purchasing experience ever!

  • @dannyalcantara3759
    @dannyalcantara3759 Před 2 lety +2

    Marko, thank you for making this video, you gave a lot of knowledge to all the people specially those who are out there trying to buy their first car.

  • @guendoff2400
    @guendoff2400 Před 5 lety +1020

    Everytime I walk into a dealership... I head straight to the soda pop and popcorn machine, grab what I can and walk straight out.

  • @PapaGoody
    @PapaGoody Před 5 lety +19

    My favorite part is when they send you to the finance department, make you wait 45 min to an hour so that you are so anxious to get the hell out of there that you wont read any of the details on all the paperwork they "throw" at you.

  • @JokersWild70
    @JokersWild70 Před rokem +2

    I just passed this video and the 7 car scams to avoid video onto a girl friend of mine who is going to be buying a new or used car next week. I told her "watch these videos before you go car shopping!!!" and she promised she would. So thank you for doing these.

  • @hue4512
    @hue4512 Před 2 lety +3

    I never buy a new car…I have my financing in place as well, they still play games though.

  • @everlynnest-louis3675
    @everlynnest-louis3675 Před 2 lety +2

    i find you funny and real the way you talk in sales reality..i learned from you

  • @WA-ge3vz
    @WA-ge3vz Před 4 lety +255

    I just payed off my Honda Accord that only has 50k miles on it. Looking forward to many years with no car payments.

    • @victorsanchez9927
      @victorsanchez9927 Před 4 lety +38

      u got 450k miles left before engine needs oil change and 200k left on tranny lol

    • @u13erfitz
      @u13erfitz Před 4 lety +11

      Victor Sanchez If it’s a manual make that 800k

    • @jb7797
      @jb7797 Před 3 lety +6

      @@u13erfitz never seen a honda with 800k yet.... are you sure thats not toyota?

    • @dhatchbernier
      @dhatchbernier Před 3 lety +1

      Too bad it’s such a boring car.

    • @cfoster6804
      @cfoster6804 Před 3 lety +3

      I did that with my Saturn Ion many years ago. It's a 2006. Paid it off in 4 years and still driving it today. Has 165k miles now. The day I paid it off was a great feeling!

  • @BreezyGamer92
    @BreezyGamer92 Před 4 lety +36

    My experience at dealerships being scammed they have convinced me it is less expensive to just repair older vehicles than give a dealership a third of my monthly income.

  • @aliceasnellgrove472
    @aliceasnellgrove472 Před 2 lety +2

    Your videos are great! This one especially hits home. Keep up the great work!

  • @benANDjun
    @benANDjun Před 2 lety +8

    Showed this to my husband (never purchased before) after our experience at a dealer, and he thought I was some wizard because I know these similar ropes. Haha. Thanks for explaining this simply because it helped me feel validated and helped him realize how this game is played. I of course asked for my own coffee before he could offer. ;)

  • @---cr8nw
    @---cr8nw Před 4 lety +235

    Separate your transactions. You're doing 3 things, not one. You're selling a car, borrowing money, and buying a car. If you do all three things at the same time, you give the dealership the power to leverage one aspect of the deal against another.
    1. Do your prep work. Know what your car is worth. Get printouts of the Carfax and Edmonds and Kelley Blue Book values for it. Figure out which car you want to buy (including trim level). Find out the MSRP, the book value, and the actual selling price in the area. Also call a few dealerships to ask what the extended warranty costs. Decide before you ever leave your house whether or not you're getting an extended warranty. Shop for rates on a loan with several banks and credit unions.
    2. Go to a bank or credit union and get pre approved for a loan under terms that you're comfortable with.
    3. Go to the dealership and haggle down the price of the car to what you're comfortable with. Close the deal and fill out the paperwork.
    4. After you have the keys in hand, tell the dealer: "On second thought, maybe I do need to sell my old car. I can't drive them both home. Here's the Carfax on it and the Edmonds and Kelley Blue Book Values on it. I know you need to have a margin in there, but what'll you give me for it?" Be comfortable with walking away and selling the car on your own if they lowball you too much.
    It's also helpful to mess with them to show them that you're on equal ground. "That's a really nice brochure you've had printed. I bet a lot of people think those extended warranty prices are fixed because they're printed in a brochure. I'll give you $750 for the extended warranty." Whether you end up buying the warranty or not, it shows that you're not fooled by simple mind games.

    • @indo3052
      @indo3052 Před 4 lety +2

      What do u mean by extended warrantys not being fixed?

    • @---cr8nw
      @---cr8nw Před 4 lety +15

      @@indo3052, when you buy a car at the dealership, they take you back to the "finance office" to shoe you brochures of what the extended warranties are and what they cover. They often have the prices printed in them. Sometimes, the look up the prices based on the year and model of the car. None of that matters. The price of the warranty is more flexible than they want you to believe. Sure, there's a bottom limit that they can't sell a warranty below without losing money. But that bottom limit is much lower than the brochure price.

    • @indo3052
      @indo3052 Před 4 lety +1

      - - ahh. Thx...good thing u can usually get a prorated refund on them after the fact. I just did on one vehicle

    • @deliber8cre8tor
      @deliber8cre8tor Před 4 lety +3

      Hey 3 weeks ago !! Thank you so much for taking the time to post this incredibly valuable information.. Very kind of you.... :)

    • @gkcamden9050
      @gkcamden9050 Před 4 lety +4

      - - I agree with your recommendations with one alteration. If you wait until you have the keys in your hand you are missing out on possible sales tax reduction from a trade-in. So, as you said, do you homework on the new vehicle, know what you can get from others for your old vehicle, have a great financing option already figured out before you walk in the dealership, negotiate the price of the new car/truck without any other distractions (I prefer to do over the phone with the dealership’s Internet salesperson), *then* talk trade-in.
      If you wait until you have the keys in your hand you are missing out on possible sales tax reduction from a trade-in. Hypothetical example: if your trade-in is a 4 year old platinum F-150 FX4 and worth $35K a trade-in might reduce the sales tax by $2,500. Other offers would need to be that much better than what the dealership is offering.

  • @shgsr71
    @shgsr71 Před 5 lety +556

    I’ve worked in dealerships for over 20 years.
    The finance department is the absolute bottom of the barrel.
    This video is accurate

    • @vambo13257
      @vambo13257 Před 5 lety +9

      then you are a turd, probably never made it to management!

    • @vambo13257
      @vambo13257 Před 5 lety +10

      @Terry Melvin sure because if you finance directly from a bank or credit union they will not repo you???

    • @firstnamefirst3200
      @firstnamefirst3200 Před 5 lety +12

      Credit unions pay a "flat" to a store for selli g them a deal, zero rate markup allowed, warranties come with a markup of course. Does Best Buy sell warranties out of the goodness of their heart? For those who end up needing them theyre well worth it. The car business is not always this guys take. I will show you carfax and autocheck. I will show you an independent aim report to condition of vehicle. I will show you all available service history including our recon bill, and the checklist for inspection, brakes, tires etc. My cars are worth more than the cheap outliers because i don't have to hide anything. How is that ripping you off?

    • @jrsteffes4
      @jrsteffes4 Před 5 lety +23

      This guy is just another joke. Failed car guy broke off his @$$. I’ve been in the car industry for 20 years.... seeing this is another financial advisor with bad credit spinning BS. Most dealerships/manufacturers have 0% financing so banks can’t do better. Catch is for all u people saying “the big bad car guys” pay ur bills so u can qualify! Now the 20 year guy saying finance is the bottom of the barrel..... get out of the industry please. Your the reason we have a bad name. Hang up your gold nugget ring and white shoes. Lot lizards are dead just like the “for square” go be a Walmart greater where you belong. As for this youtuber your about 5 years behind! Go back to school. No one uses for squares anymore.

    • @jrsteffes4
      @jrsteffes4 Před 5 lety +2

      D .G please get out of the car industry! The industry doesn’t need deadbeat lot lizards dragging us down!

  • @sangkang6294
    @sangkang6294 Před 2 lety +2

    I bought my first brand new car when I graduated from college and that was the last time I ever went to a dealership for another vehicle....

  • @dpar44
    @dpar44 Před 2 lety +25

    Great video, and accurate for "old school" dealers that still use a 4-square. I worked at a Chevy dealer that used them, but at Toyota and at Cadillac we just printed a DMS-generated deal sheet with all numbers, and a section for payment selection which you'd get the buyer to focus on and "select" which payment they wanted. You would then know if it was a "lay down" or someone that wanted to negotiate. In this seller's market though, there is little to no negotiation - the "deal" is if the unit you want is even in stock. My buddy at Land Rover tells people that all the time - merely having it is your deal because many desirable models are selling way above sticker this year, and allocation is razor thin to replenish what they sell.

    • @JoeTakagi00
      @JoeTakagi00 Před 2 lety +2

      Currently looking at new cars. Are you saying we should just accept their numbers because of the market?

    • @justinsnook1932
      @justinsnook1932 Před rokem +1

      I can agree with this. I am being pressured to do a non-refundable $500 deposit on the 2022 Hyundai Accents because 2/3 in-transit have already sold before even hitting the floor.
      I'm taking my time though, not gonna have a deposit hook me in my jaw.

  • @brianrakestraw7163
    @brianrakestraw7163 Před 4 lety +36

    I told this guy who was selling me the payment, and not the price. He was very Adamant. I told him that I’m not buying a payment. and that’s all they would discuss. So, i went and got my own financing from my bank, and boy did that make them mad! I bought that Jeep well below it’s value! Know the basics!!!

    • @EarlyBirdCraft
      @EarlyBirdCraft Před 4 lety +12

      @Brian Rakestraw, Same! They DO get so mad! I didn’t realize that until today I bought a Chevy Malibu. Got pre-approved by a bank and all I needed from the dealer was a purchase order.
      F&I manager guy tried to act super important but couldn’t. Because I had done his job😂😂😂 he treated me like a piece of shit but I didn’t care. I didn’t try to find friends. I found a good car. Lol

  • @joejoemenme
    @joejoemenme Před 4 lety +517

    I use to work at a dealership for 11 years. He is telling you the truth

    • @WhiteBoardFinance
      @WhiteBoardFinance  Před 4 lety +11

      100%

    • @bryson3401
      @bryson3401 Před 4 lety +13

      Just pay cash 😂

    • @Andrewkc1969
      @Andrewkc1969 Před 4 lety +47

      The truth? About what, how dealerships make money? What's his next video about, how the grocery store "rips" you off by making money? He didn't explain how the dealership rips you off, he only explained how they make their money. I can't believe people expect a business to sell them something and NOT make a profit.

    • @Sig721Tau
      @Sig721Tau Před 4 lety +4

      @@WhiteBoardFinance
      Change your channel's name to just 'Whiteboard Finance' and drop your birth name at the front of it.

    • @algallego
      @algallego Před 4 lety +24

      @@Andrewkc1969 It's the difference between buying a $200 dollar mattress for $400 instead of $999. It's not that people don't expect others to make a living from profit, but noone likes being taken to the cleaners for unethical price tags! It's the whole matter of intrinsic value vs. perceived value.
      Actual value vs perceived value
      In layman's terms, the real (or actual) value is what the product is actually worth, without any outside expectations from the consumer or seller. Perceived (or intangible) value is what consumers think the product is actually worth. Marketers create intangible value to make up (greedily profit) for real value.

  • @topfloorstudio2684
    @topfloorstudio2684 Před 2 lety +1

    This is awesome advice and insight. I love your delivery too, great information thank you!

  • @acourtney365
    @acourtney365 Před 2 lety +2

    Awesome info , I was hipped to the game when I purchased my last car deal.

  • @JackBlack-yo1vs
    @JackBlack-yo1vs Před 5 lety +178

    Bought an Accord and maintain it = 200,000+ miles looks and drives like brand new and no car payment since 2008.
    Best decision I ever made.

    • @kckunkun
      @kckunkun Před 5 lety

      What if you bought the car in 1988?

    • @BeaverMonkey
      @BeaverMonkey Před 5 lety +2

      2005 Accord, 108k miles, no payments since 2010. I agree with you, best decision I ever made!

    • @andrymashka1757
      @andrymashka1757 Před 5 lety +2

      Bought wrecked 2012 Audi with 25k miles , fixed, took it to a dealer, got extended warranty up to 100k miles. Drove s@it out of it until warranty expired and sold it to private rental company for over $1k more I bought it for. Reason it was BLACK just like they need it. Cheers

    • @JackBlack-yo1vs
      @JackBlack-yo1vs Před 5 lety

      @@kckunkun - No no no. Bought the car in 2006 brand new. Paid it off early. The Accord looks and drives like the day I bought it. Radio button is worn down but that is so minor I forget about my horrible channel surfing affliction.

    • @kyleallen1858
      @kyleallen1858 Před 5 lety

      @@BeaverMonkey accords and camrys and subarus are unbelievable machines.

  • @zakplays703
    @zakplays703 Před 5 lety +184

    I died at “ you might as well get your rear end serviced”😂😂😂😂😂

    • @Gemini530
      @Gemini530 Před 5 lety +4

      ZakiosPS ...I wouldn’t mind if he is the service guy 😁

    • @callumbalodis1760
      @callumbalodis1760 Před 5 lety +1

      ZakiosPS I wonder if he offers it 😉

  • @FinancialFreedomMadeSimple

    Love how you uncover the secrets, great video Marko!

  • @tonycamisi4821
    @tonycamisi4821 Před 2 lety +31

    This was amazing. I am in the process of buying a car and this gives me way more confidence about understanding my decision. Thank you, Marko.

  • @tyleryoung9638
    @tyleryoung9638 Před 5 lety +109

    Step 1: don't mention that you are trading in a vehicle until you agree on a price of the car you are buying.
    Step 2: determine your trade value ahead of time and don't budge.
    Step 3. Get preapproved credit for the amount you want to finance at a fixed rate and tell them that after you agree on the trade and purchase.
    Step 4: offer to get up and walk out if they find any of this disagreeable. Chances are if its the last week of the month and they have spent several hours negotiating and test driving, you can get your price. I have walked out of dealerships after 4 hours and taken all the numbers to a different dealership and had the second dealership agree immediately to what I am offering.

    • @jeffruck7757
      @jeffruck7757 Před 5 lety +9

      Most people who "determine" the value of their car have no idea what they are doing - you think it's in "excellent" condition when it fact it isn't -

    • @tyleryoung9638
      @tyleryoung9638 Před 5 lety +7

      @@jeffruck7757 Most of the time its "fair" condition when you look at how the assessment system works. The problem is that car dealers try and create a large margin on used vehicle sales by offering such low value on trade ins.

    • @rasmuth63
      @rasmuth63 Před 5 lety +2

      as far as trade value is concerned, be intelligent enough to understand you can't trade for a retail value, that is a number you can expect if you sell the vehicle yourself and the vehicle is in top notch condition. Trade or wholesale value is a more realistic number.

    • @mms8393
      @mms8393 Před 5 lety +9

      The first question the salesperson asks is: "Do you have a trade?"

    • @twelveeighteenofficial7487
      @twelveeighteenofficial7487 Před 5 lety +6

      @@mms8393 - salespeople deflect questions all the time. Do likewise. Push past the question and talk about what car you want.

  • @barryklinger5229
    @barryklinger5229 Před 5 lety +17

    Right on. I learned about the quad years ago. I never mention a trade until the end, I don't disclose my method of payment (always cash) until we've settled on a price, and I keep the conversation in the upper right the whole time. I bring ads from other dealers from a 200 mile radius. Tell them you're willing to drive 3 hours to save $x,xxx.00.
    I've been offered jobs at dealerships after buying cars, and I'm not a smart dude.

    • @yodamunkey
      @yodamunkey Před 5 lety +1

      This was more useful than the whole video, thanks!

  • @donnasullivan7911
    @donnasullivan7911 Před 2 lety +1

    Very informative, and well presented. Thank you for sharing such use information 🙂👍🏻
    Love all your videos btw💜

  • @miguelmonicac.8373
    @miguelmonicac.8373 Před 2 lety +2

    nice tips

  • @odysseuspsarros4695
    @odysseuspsarros4695 Před 4 lety +523

    " The downvotes are used car salesmen "

    • @ryanw.975
      @ryanw.975 Před 4 lety +7

      they mad

    • @brodyspears8290
      @brodyspears8290 Před 3 lety +5

      Dislikes not downvotes

    • @marlonestrella8105
      @marlonestrella8105 Před 3 lety +2

      I think it all depends. What he says is true for most part but a lot of dealerships now are trying to move older style vehicles and offering a low interest rate.... Mazda and Subaru are offering 0APR for 60mo. How can you beat that

    • @jackstraw5527
      @jackstraw5527 Před 3 lety

      @@marlonestrella8105 How can you beat that? Buy an older version of the car with cash... 100% down 0 financing... period

    • @marlonestrella8105
      @marlonestrella8105 Před 3 lety +1

      @@jackstraw5527 yeah but you would have to buy a really old car and it may not have the features you want... if it’s something you want, you buy it (only if it’s affordable and you don’t go beyond your means)
      You get a product that you’re not happy with, you might as well throw your money away.... why buy an older model, why don’t you just buy a salvage junk car, ride a bike? Take the bus? Fkn wall? That shit is free! Lol

  • @drstevenklayman
    @drstevenklayman Před 4 lety +30

    Great job. I just went into a dealership last week. He did exactly what you said. He really lowballed my trade-in and he tried to get me to sign a worthless piece of paper. I told him I’m not signing anything. He said “but I need to have something I can take back to the manager. “I told him I’m not signing anything . now take it back to your manager. “I ended up walking out. Of course within a week he called us back and said “what do I need to do to earn your business?. “There’s nothing this guy can do to earn my business

    • @clintjoungaye3139
      @clintjoungaye3139 Před 4 lety

      Steven this video advice is talk trade in after you negotiate that way a big minus will happen listen to almost at the end of video.

    • @artdogg50
      @artdogg50 Před 4 lety +1

      These same guys keep emailing me too months after I walked out. 🤣

  • @vworley21
    @vworley21 Před rokem +4

    I worked at a Chevy dealership. This is verbatim what we did. Great explanation

  • @arturojosemanriquezponce2090

    Great Video! Thanks Marko!

  • @dushyantparkhi
    @dushyantparkhi Před 4 lety +53

    Reflective white board, sqeeky old sketch pens, heiroglyphic handwriting , what saves the day ? GREAT HONEST CONTENT 👍

  • @jettrink7510
    @jettrink7510 Před 4 lety +52

    I got ganged up on by the salesman, floor manager, sales manager, and finance Honcho.
    What a bad trip baby...

    • @carmentall1166
      @carmentall1166 Před 3 lety +2

      so what happened?

    • @fabiannino4106
      @fabiannino4106 Před 3 lety +5

      Same thing happened to me today but I already knew how they work so I argued with them a little bit just for fun then walked off.

  • @Jessicatorres_768
    @Jessicatorres_768 Před 8 měsíci +52

    Managing money is different from accumulating wealth, and the lack of investment education in schools may explain why people struggle to maintain their financial gains. The examples you provided are relevant, and I personally benefited from the market crisis, as I embrace challenging times while others tend to avoid them. Well, at least my advisor does too, jokingly.

    • @alicebenard5713
      @alicebenard5713 Před 8 měsíci

      Investors should exercise caution with their exposure and exercise caution when considering new investments, particularly during periods of inflation. It is advisable to seek guidance from a professional or trusted advisor in order to navigate this recession and achieve potential high yields.

    • @JamesAnderson-ox2ep
      @JamesAnderson-ox2ep Před 8 měsíci

      I subscribed for a few trading courses but it didn't help much, been getting suggestions to use a proper financial advisor, how did you go about touching base with your adviser

    • @Jessicatorres_768
      @Jessicatorres_768 Před 8 měsíci

      Through closely monitoring the performance of my portfolio, I have witnessed a remarkable growth of $485k in just the past two quarters. This experience has shed light on why experienced traders are able to generate substantial returns even in lesser-known markets. It is safe to say that this bold decision has been one of the most impactful choices I have made recently.

    • @KatherineAnderson-lm8bw
      @KatherineAnderson-lm8bw Před 8 měsíci

      Wow, that’s stirring! Do you mind connecting me to your advisor please. I desperately need one to diversified my portfolio.

    • @SophiaBint-wj8wn
      @SophiaBint-wj8wn Před 8 měsíci

      I’ve actually been looking into advisors lately, the news I’ve been seeing in the market hasn’t been so encouraging. who’s the person guiding you?

  • @coachcraigjgarcia
    @coachcraigjgarcia Před 2 lety +2

    Good Information! Thank you.

  • @davidpetrelle3294
    @davidpetrelle3294 Před 3 lety +185

    Marco,
    Wanted to leave a comment to thank you for this video! My wife and I were first time car buyers and we used the advice from this video to get a deal that we were very happy with. We really didn’t know exactly what we were getting into, being first time car buyers, but after watching your videos we were not surprised by any of the tactics the sales people gave us. We ended up walking out of the dealership because they were not at the number we wanted and as soon as we got down the road they gave us a call offering the OTD price we wanted. So I just wanted to leave a comment saying thank you for the video, it really helped!!

  • @JohnSpo
    @JohnSpo Před 5 lety +206

    "you're gonna sign that, cause you're an idiot." brilliant. Literally laughed out loud.

    • @eduardorodriguez694
      @eduardorodriguez694 Před 5 lety +3

      I've been there! 🤣

    • @KZ-do6il
      @KZ-do6il Před 5 lety +5

      I just started watching his videos coz they came in my recommendation somehow but i like it he keeps it real and isn't trying to be a ass kisser

    • @sdashia
      @sdashia Před 5 lety +1

      @@orianna9200 what kind of lawyers left a bad impression? Most are up and up.

    • @AlanHayesLimerick
      @AlanHayesLimerick Před 5 lety +1

      @@orianna9200 what about antique dealers?

    • @dphotos007
      @dphotos007 Před 5 lety

      Hate telemarking people too along with lawyers and car sales people.

  • @chrisehrhorn4160
    @chrisehrhorn4160 Před 2 lety +1

    The “ dreaded “ four square. I sold cars for 15 years and only the the new car stores insisted that we use it. It’s smoke and mirrors. Great video !

  • @joibu
    @joibu Před 2 lety +1

    Valuable tips! Tnx for sharing sir!!