Dargo
Super Member
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2004
- Messages
- 5,981
- Location
- S. IN
- Tractor
- Jinma, Foton, TYM, Belarus, Yanmar, Branson, Montana, Mahindra and maybe some green and orange too.
I can't for the life of me figure out why anybody would talk about "dealer invoice" when talking about buying a vehicle. The dealer doesn't pay invoice, the dealer pays floorplan. Plus they have incentives from the automakers to sell so many, etc. Your best tool when pricing is go to as many dealers you can and compare prices. It never ceases to amaze me how much cheaper you can buy vehicles when you just shop around. This is part of the reason why GM and Chrysler wanted to axe so many dealers, it lowers the cost of each vehicle.
Just like when I was tractor shopping the Deere dealers were $2-4K apart on the same tractor that cost low $20's.
What?!! Sorry man, but you honestly do not have a clue. A dealer's "floorplan" is simply the amount he has financed on his inventory. When the dealer reports a vehicle as sold, he has to pay off his floorplan amount on that vehicle. If not, he is considered 'out of trust' (sorry, I'm not even going to begin to explain all of that stuff to you) Although it's relatively rare, I know several dealers who do not floorplan anything. I don't intend to sound condescending, but after being in and around the auto industry for over 25 years, your statement is typical of a person who knows absolutely nothing about how a dealership is run but yaps like they know it all.
An "invoice" is just that; a bill for the vehicle from the manufacturer. Most manufacturers have 'holdback', which represents approximately 3% of the invoice that the dealer gets back months after they sell the vehicle. A dealer selling everything at dead invoice price will go out of business. Besides, why would they work 14 hours a day, take loads of stress, deal with misinformed customers and all the other hassles when they can get better than 3% just investing their money?
Just like when there are rebates and special interest rates, at times there is 'dealer cash' from the manufacturer on certain vehicles for a certain time period. Generally, this is to help clear out slow moving units, units the factory has built too many of, or to clear out the last year's model. Most of the time the dealers give up this cash to move those units and get them off his floorplan so he's no longer paying interest on that unit. A sign that there is dealer cash or dealer incentives is when a dealer advertises "below invoice" (and isn't a shady dealer) on certain units.
Right now it wouldn't surprise me to see some dealer cash and large rebates from the factory come out soon on diesel pickups with diesel right at $4 a gallon and looking like it will only go up. On the other hand, this same market force drives down the price of used diesel pickups. I bought my last diesel pickup almost 3 years ago when diesel was $5 in many places. Once diesel fuel dropped in price, the value of my pickup raised up past what I paid for it and my truck is still worth more than what I paid for it 3 years ago. I don't look to see 'panic selling' like we had then with diesel pickups. At $5 a gallon back then, some customers were trading in their diesel pickups and taking a HUGE beating on depreciation, terrified that they couldn't afford to drive their truck. Regardless, unless you just want 'new', most of the best buys on pickups are 1 to 3 year old used ones.