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fangsport wrote:Mr lunchie, do you have pics to prove your theory??
fangsport wrote:Not just cars , either
Leasing versus Purchasing
The mathematics on the Paul McCartney-Heather Mills divorce is as follows:
After 5 years of marriage, he paid her $49 million. Assuming he got sex every night during their 5 year relationship (which would NOT have happened!) it ended up costing him $26,849 per time.
On the other hand, Elliot Spitzer's call girl, Kristen, an absolute stunner with a body like no other, charges $4,000 an hour. For anything!
Had Paul McCartney 'employed' Kristen for 5 years, he would've paid $7.3 million for an hour of sex every night for 5 years (a saving of $41.7 million).
Value-added benefits are: a 22 year old hot babe, no begging, no coaxing, never a headache, plays all requests, ability to put BOTH legs around you (!!!), no bitching and complaining or 'to do' lists. Best of all, she leaves when you're done, and comes back when you ask her. All at 1/7th the cost, with no legal fees.
Sometimes renting makes far more sense.
maybe i could 'lease' the pictures of said sister???
dnalunchie wrote:fangsport wrote:Mr lunchie, do you have pics to prove your theory??
.........
Mr Revhead wrote:dnalunchie wrote:fangsport wrote:Mr lunchie, do you have pics to prove your theory??
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There is only one way to make it end....
thornz wrote:Anybody here ever leased a car, one that is a fully maintained lease, so you dont actually own the car, just effectively renting it for a set amount of time. Is it a effective way of owning a nice car, or are you better to finance something to own it outright?
The idea of leasing sounds quite attractive, every however many years the lease is, you can upgrade to a new car, but am guessing that there must be some cons to the idea as well ie never actually owning the vehicle. However after you take into account operating costs and depreciation, has anyone got any idea how it would stack up against financing to own?
Anyone work in the idustry and could give any guides to it?
Al wrote:thornz wrote:Anybody here ever leased a car, one that is a fully maintained lease, so you dont actually own the car, just effectively renting it for a set amount of time. Is it a effective way of owning a nice car, or are you better to finance something to own it outright?
The idea of leasing sounds quite attractive, every however many years the lease is, you can upgrade to a new car, but am guessing that there must be some cons to the idea as well ie never actually owning the vehicle. However after you take into account operating costs and depreciation, has anyone got any idea how it would stack up against financing to own?
Anyone work in the idustry and could give any guides to it?
The best way to lease is to write it off as an expense to your company, that way you aren't tying up capital and you cut down the amount of tax you pay.
Leasing IMO isn't the greatest option for an individual.
thornz wrote:Anybody here ever leased a car, one that is a fully maintained lease, so you dont actually own the car, just effectively renting it for a set amount of time. Is it a effective way of owning a nice car, or are you better to finance something to own it outright?
The idea of leasing sounds quite attractive, every however many years the lease is, you can upgrade to a new car, but am guessing that there must be some cons to the idea as well ie never actually owning the vehicle. However after you take into account operating costs and depreciation, has anyone got any idea how it would stack up against financing to own?
Anyone work in the idustry and could give any guides to it?
AsD wrote:
if you do lease, you should clearly think about the exact terms that you will be doing as you don't want to be paying excess km charges (which is typically quite high as it covers the vehicle's depreciation and maintenance, along as pinging you as well). Think about whether you have the cashflow to continue with the payments over the lease as you don't want to be early terminating the contract as it may be quite a hefty amount.
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