mkasner
Mar 08, 2023Explorer
Rv loan rates!
Anyone looked at RV loan rates lately! For 800+ credit scores 8% or more! Even through local credit union. Who is buying these over priced RVs with these rates?
valhalla360 wrote:Even when the market goes down, I still have the money to pay it off; and still get to keep the difference on what I already made.
Operating on leverage works great until it doesn't...then it multiplies the losses. The ones talking about being savey, always gloss over this part and it would never happen to them...until it does.
The trick is to get ahead of the game. Once you have no loan payments, it's easy to save up for big ticket items.
valhalla360 wrote:
Operating on leverage works great until it doesn't...then it multiplies the losses. The ones talking about being savey, always gloss over this part and it would never happen to them...until it does.
The trick is to get ahead of the game. Once you have no loan payments, it's easy to save up for big ticket items.
3 tons wrote:
The correct answer varies per individual, retirement window and one’s age - each strategy will be somewhat situational and different…Fortunately, my ‘cobbled together’ strategies (over a time…) ended up working out, and I’ve been enjoying emancipation now for 10 years…However, post trowing in the towel, humility is a component - this is why I’m often reminded that “I’m a success in spite of my reckless self”!!
3 tons
Bedlam wrote:
I have never financed discretionary purchases. It takes me a while to save up, but I do not have the overhead of loans slowing my saving. Paying off our home was the real factor in being able to pre save for purchases rather than financing them into the future at a higher cost.