Financing Kubota Financing

/ Kubota Financing #21  
We just bought a new B2920 on December 28,2011. Either zero percent financing or $1050 off price for cash. Dealer quoted $16500 for tractor with FEL. We paid cash and he gave $1050 off that price and we paid $15450. Don't know if was good deal or not but here in North Georgia was the best we could do.

Very similar to my deal -- paid $15422 for the B2920 with LA364 front loader a few days before Christmas.

Interestingly, the cash discounts were dependent on how long a given tractor was in inventory. Some had $700 off, some had $1050 off.
 
/ Kubota Financing #22  
I guess it may just be a matter of semantics or putting too fine a point on it, but here goes anyway...

When Kubota (or any other company) offers 0% financing, it is 0% financing. That is not to say that the total cost is necessarily neutral. If you can get a cash discount on the purchase price, for instance, you're total cost is less than if you finance at the higher purchase price. But the amount you finance is still at 0% interest - the higher total cost to you is due to the higher purchase price and no additional cost is added from interest.

The 0% interest option allows folks that do not have the cash (or folks with the cash that prefer not to part with it) to still get their tractor, and Kubota is willing to carry the debt and risk to make the sale. It's a win-win.
 
/ Kubota Financing #23  
Bought an L3800 on 12/30/11 to take advantage of 0% for 60 months (now 0% for 48, I believe). I did so after finding the best cash price between three fairly local dealers. You can't beat the 0% if you settle on a cash price, first.
 
/ Kubota Financing #24  
I guess it may just be a matter of semantics or putting too fine a point on it, but here goes anyway...

When Kubota (or any other company) offers 0% financing, it is 0% financing. That is not to say that the total cost is necessarily neutral. If you can get a cash discount on the purchase price, for instance, you're total cost is less than if you finance at the higher purchase price. But the amount you finance is still at 0% interest - the higher total cost to you is due to the higher purchase price and no additional cost is added from interest.

The 0% interest option allows folks that do not have the cash (or folks with the cash that prefer not to part with it) to still get their tractor, and Kubota is willing to carry the debt and risk to make the sale. It's a win-win.

Well said.:thumbsup:
 
/ Kubota Financing #25  
Current Kubota Company Interest Rates. Finance Promotional Rates
Always best to go to their site and see for yourself. There are some "buy down" rates that are not shown here. Buy down rates mean lower interest rates with some form of prepaid interest or higher charge for the item being sold and financed. Used to be used often in car and home sales.
 
/ Kubota Financing #27  
Does anyone know about Kubota financing? I had a dealer tell me that Kubota adds a 2% fee into the financing so its not really 0% for 48 months. Anyone know if this is true?
Thanks,
Nothing is free. It's marked up in the price. If not, they'd be out of business quick.. an age-old discussion topic. Search the forum and find plenty of other opinions, same as will accumulate here.

.
 
/ Kubota Financing #28  
Nothing is free. It's marked up in the price. If not, they'd be out of business quick.. an age-old discussion topic. Search the forum and find plenty of other opinions, same as will accumulate here.

.

When I was shopping, the rates went from 3% to 0% and the price didn't increase..If that profit is in the price, it's there either way.

Companies like kubota can finance at 0% when they their cost of funds is nearly zero..I'm sure kubota has a nice profic cushon on their stuff...not referring to the dealers.
 
/ Kubota Financing #29  
Does anyone know about Kubota financing? I had a dealer tell me that Kubota adds a 2% fee into the financing so its not really 0% for 48 months. Anyone know if this is true?
Thanks,

This Kubota page Finance Promotional Rates shows various financing promotions. No mention of increasing the price if you finance.

Some financing is 0% ranging from 24 to 60 months, depending on model. Other financing is low-rate. Both promotions end March 31.
 
/ Kubota Financing #30  
I bought a new Kubota this August and the price was the same for cash or the financing at 0%. There was a caveat though. It you use the 0% financing you must carry Kubota insurance. Since they make money (most likely after all they are in the business to make money) on the insurance it offsets the 0% financing. But they can borrow money cheaply now, just like the U.S. banks.

x2....
 
/ Kubota Financing #31  
I bought a new Kubota this August and the price was the same for cash or the financing at 0%. There was a caveat though. It you use the 0% financing you must carry Kubota insurance.

Yes, that was the case when we bought our new BX-2360 in October.

I'm well aware that companies must make money, and nothing is "free." But, for us, the 0% financing meant we could buy the tractor without cashing-in retirement savings.

The insurance cost $565, as I recall. If we'd paid cash, we would have lost -- even at a paltry 2% -- $1,500 appreciation on on our reduced savings over the five years. In this case, the 0% 60-month financing sealed the deal.Not to mention that the tractor has been immensely useful helping us build a large deck for our new house. Update: Deck :)
 
/ Kubota Financing #32  
I can tell you for a fact the 0% interest is just a marketing gimmick, most finance contracts on tractors are fixed, I.e regardless of whether you pay them out early or stay the full term it will still cost the same. However when you think you have 0% people tend to let them run it's course. They are then more likely to upgrade when the contract finishes. It's all marketing!

The way we get the 0% in the first place is either the importer or dealer buys the rate down from the lender. If the importer does it, there will be no difference between cash price and finance as they share the cost between all tractors sold. If the dealer does it then there will be a difference between cash or finance.

Dealers do this to get a sale, if you think your not paying any interest then your more Likely to sign up as you find the deposit, proof is in the shear number of people on this thread saying that's why they went ahead. 0% sells tractors!

At the end of the day, if your dealer knows how the system works then you will always get a better deal for cash, even if you then go a finance through your bank.

There is one thing you can always guarantee banks / financiers don't give money away for free, you will always pay for it, whether it be spread across multiple sales or in extra 'fees' they will always win. And realistically they have to, otherwise they wouldn't have money to lend to you in the first place!

A perfect example of this is with the finance we offer on Kioti, currently we have a base rate of 8% however the fees are only $250. To directly compare this to JD finance they have a 0% rate but there fees add $2400 to the term at the end of the day if the amount financed was the same then they will both come out about the same (in fact one I did today JD was actually more expensive over the term) but if you were given the option of 8% or 0% which one would you pick?
(the ones who picked the 8% just saved yourself some money!)
Now don't get this confused with loans in general, but this is defiantly how tractor financing works.
 
/ Kubota Financing #33  
I can tell you for a fact the 0% interest is just a marketing gimmick, most finance contracts on tractors are fixed, I.e regardless of whether you pay them out early or stay the full term it will still cost the same. However when you think you have 0% people tend to let them run it's course. They are then more likely to upgrade when the contract finishes. It's all marketing!

The way we get the 0% in the first place is either the importer or dealer buys the rate down from the lender. If the importer does it, there will be no difference between cash price and finance as they share the cost between all tractors sold. If the dealer does it then there will be a difference between cash or finance.

Dealers do this to get a sale, if you think your not paying any interest then your more Likely to sign up as you find the deposit, proof is in the shear number of people on this thread saying that's why they went ahead. 0% sells tractors!

At the end of the day, if your dealer knows how the system works then you will always get a better deal for cash, even if you then go a finance through your bank.

There is one thing you can always guarantee banks / financiers don't give money away for free, you will always pay for it, whether it be spread across multiple sales or in extra 'fees' they will always win. And realistically they have to, otherwise they wouldn't have money to lend to you in the first place!

A perfect example of this is with the finance we offer on Kioti, currently we have a base rate of 8% however the fees are only $250. To directly compare this to JD finance they have a 0% rate but there fees add $2400 to the term at the end of the day if the amount financed was the same then they will both come out about the same (in fact one I did today JD was actually more expensive over the term) but if you were given the option of 8% or 0% which one would you pick?
(the ones who picked the 8% just saved yourself some money!)
Now don't get this confused with loans in general, but this is defiantly how tractor financing works.
:D:D:DYou've sort of shuffled a lot of peas and carrotts on a checker board. Your marketing aspect is true but it really has very little to do with whether it is a 0% loan or not when a customer is buying a tractor. I first have a degree in Accounting and also was even hired by the Gvmnt as an Auditor. I also taught Marketing at the College for years and I've bought 13 Kubotas, no Kiotes.
Fist I agree it is a Marketing strategy. No doubt, absolutely. Just like free oil for life if buying a Chrysler product at the Somerset, Ky car dealer. Even the free tires for life at another local car dealer. Even the give you $1000 for any vehicle you can drag into the lot marketing deal. Now lets move on past Marketing which almost all sellers of a product or service should do.
0% Financing at Kubota Dealers is the topic and I'm going to stay with that for a bit. As I've said I've bought 13 Kubotas in 9 years, well actually it was over an 8 year period of time. OK the Kubotas I bought were sitting on a Kubota dealers lot. The dealer did not own the Kubotas, they belonged to Kubota. When he made a sale he called and got a "spot" price. He had that figure in his mind and then added his "profit" to that figure and told me what it would take to buy the machine (Kubota, not Kioti). Over the years he said there was a discount if I paid cash but most of the time he said the price was the same for cash or finance and made no difference to him which I did. (Forget Marketing tool I said) he wasn't marketing, he was processing the deal. I could go to a bank for loan, have cash in my pocket or sign his printed out in less than 2 minutes papers and the bottom line was he still wanted $16000 cash or charge. No difference, still $16000.
He, the dealer, got the same commission/profit/payment no matter what I did, no more no less so he had no reason for me to do one over the other, money wise.
That's 0% interest if I signed his papers and paid him $16000 over 60 months ($266.66 per month).
This is where it gets interesting of the beliefs that the company is there to make money and adds the cost to the tractor. That will be true, whatever that cost is. Absolutely true. Some say Japanese Gvmnt gives free to almost free loan money to companies. Don't know if that's true or not and don't care because it doesn't matter to the issue of 0% being truly 0% to buyers of Kubotas that take the 0% when there are no discounts for cash offered by the Company. Those discounts are NOT dealer discounts, they are Kubota Company discounts so makes no difference to dealer.
OK who's paying for these 0% loans???????Everyone who buys a Kubota whether they take abvantage of the deal or not. Just like the free oil for life car deals and the free tires for life car deals. The car dealer is getting his overhead or closing, same for Kubota Company but Dealers are NOT Kubota Company. Tractors or Kubota Dealerships are not the same as Car dealerships where Dealers have to buy the products and maybe Kioti dealers are more like car dealers than Kubota Franchise Dealers. So, those of us buying and using the 0% are getting 0% because we are paying the same price as cash buyers but keeping our money for 48 to 60 months, sorry guys for you nonbelievers but that's 0% to the using Buyer no matter how you look at it. It only applies to users.
 
/ Kubota Financing #34  
The flaw in the argument is in cases where there is a cash discount. I got $1050 off for paying cash instead of financing (and that was an incentive straight from Kubota -- it was a choice between 0% financing or the $1050 rebate).

From there, people need to weigh present/future value of money over a loan period to decide what works best for them. Everyone will have a different perspective on it.
 
/ Kubota Financing #35  
The flaw in the argument is in cases where there is a cash discount. I got $1050 off for paying cash instead of financing (and that was an incentive straight from Kubota -- it was a choice between 0% financing or the $1050 rebate).

From there, people need to weigh present/future value of money over a loan period to decide what works best for them. Everyone will have a different perspective on it.

I didn't have that choice: Dealer told me same price, cash or 0% financing.
 
/ Kubota Financing #36  
:D:D:DYou've sort of shuffled a lot of peas and carrotts on a checker board. Your marketing aspect is true but it really has very little to do with whether it is a 0% loan or not when a customer is buying a tractor. I first have a degree in Accounting and also was even hired by the Gvmnt as an Auditor. I also taught Marketing at the College for years and I've bought 13 Kubotas, no Kiotes.
(Kubota, not Kioti). Over the years he said there was a discount if I paid cash but most of the time he said the price was the same for cash or finance and made no difference to him which I did.
I could go to a bank for loan, have cash in my pocket or sign his printed out in less than 2 minutes papers and the bottom line was he still wanted $16000 cash or charge. No difference, still $16000.
He, the dealer, got the same commission/profit/payment no matter what I did, no more no less so he had no reason for me to do one over the other, money wise.
That's 0% interest if I signed his papers and paid him $16000 over 60 months ($266.66 per month).
it doesn't matter to the issue of 0% being truly 0% to buyers of Kubotas that take the 0% when there are no discounts for cash offered by the Company. Those discounts are NOT dealer discounts, they are Kubota Company discounts so makes no difference to dealer.
OK who's paying for these 0% loans???????Everyone who buys a Kubota whether they take abvantage of the deal or not.
Dealers are NOT Kubota Company. Tractors or Kubota Dealerships are not the same as Car dealerships where Dealers have to buy the products and maybe Kioti dealers are more like car dealers than Kubota Franchise Dealers.
So, those of us buying and using the 0% are getting 0% because we are paying the same price as cash buyers but keeping our money for 48 to 60 months, sorry guys for you nonbelievers but that's 0% to the using Buyer no matter how you look at it. It only applies to users.[/quote]

I tried to make it cleat that the TRUE 0% applies when there are NO CASH DISCOUNTS which has happened several times over the years. Don't know about now and it's NEVER told on the Kubota.com website, only told at the dealers on the DAY you agree to the deal.
Simply, it's $16000 cash or charge for 48 to 60 months. Divide the sale price by the number of months and that's 0% interest for THAT BUYER.
 
/ Kubota Financing #37  
I have represented a couple Japanese companies in my business and right now, the greatest pressure for Japanese products is the exchange rate. The yen is at about 75-1$. That puts significant pricing pressure on Japanese manuf. Probably why there are no cash discounts
 
/ Kubota Financing #38  
The rebates are seasonal, so they are not always in effect. The last round of cash rebates ended on 12/31/11.
 

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