Piece of Crap Car

Piece of Crap Car


I have a new focus on dumb news. My new analyst, Joe Jones, spends an hour or two a day searching for the best in dumb news. I also think that USA Today is the best newspaper in the world. There is wisdom in idiocy.

I was unhappily scrolling through Facebook the other day and saw that one of my smart friends had posted a dumb article about the excellent Toronto Raptors basketball player who, despite making nearly a hundred million dollars, still drives a 20-year-old beater SUV.

He said of the car: “It runs… and it’s paid off.”

The second part of that statement is crucial. There is nothing better than a paid-off car. There is no monthly payment, and most of the depreciation has already occurred. You are driving for free.

I have to say that even I am not as disciplined as Kawhi Leonard. I had my last car for 7 years and about 135,000 miles when I started getting a hankering for new car smell. Much to my disappointment, the sound system in Newcar was worse than the one in Oldcar. If only there was a way to get a car with a Funktion One sound system.

Anyway, Leonard’s level of frugality is seldom seen in the NBA—or anywhere in professional sports, for that matter. I had a friend of a friend who played college hoops and made it to the NBA. He said that the players would buy a new suit for every day they were on the road. 41 road games, 41 suits. They would wear them once, and never wear them again. Given the size of the basketball players, these were bespoke suits and not off the rack. Conservatively, that’s about $100,000 worth of suits. A year. And so it goes.

In this column, I’ve tried to give people a pretty big dose of perspective. $3 on coffee every day is a luxury you can afford, and people seem to have an easier time giving up large luxuries than small luxuries. Most people would rather drive a piece of crap car than give up the morning coffee. Tell people to give up coffee (as Suze Orman does) and you will alienate the people you are trying to help.

So for starters, don’t buy 41 suits a year. But don’t buy a $10 juice every day, either. And don’t go out to eat three times a week. And don’t stay in $300-$400 hotels when you travel. All basic stuff. But the easiest way to save money, hands down, is to drive a piece of crap car.

Gravedigger

Unless you are driving a Ferrari, a car is not an investment. A car is basically a huge waste of money. Where else can you take $40,000 and set it on fire in 7 years? And pay a bunch of interest to the bank in the process? What a disaster.

Funny thing about cars—people’s egos are really tied up in the brand of the car. People like to say they drive a “Benz” or a “Beamer.” Puke. I drive a Toyota. They never break down, and they last forever. They’re a great car to own that is paid for.

I saw something the other day that I never thought I would see. A green Lambo—parked outside the Social Security office in Myrtle Beach. My analyst and I staked it out to see who the owner was. A 90-year-old man came out of the Social Security office, got in the car, and revved the engine while people took pictures. I suppose if you are 90, you can have a green Lambo. This makes sense for nobody else in Myrtle Beach.

I also spend a lot of time in Miami Beach, a town where having a Porsche is like having a Honda. I get the sense that a lot of people who own those cars literally have no other possessions. It is all about priorities.

Recurring Theme

The takeaway here is that your financial well-being, as I’ve said before, is not the product of a million small decisions, but two or three big decisions. A car can bankrupt you. Or you may get to watch helplessly as it gets towed out of your driveway. And don’t get me started on leasing, the extended warranty of auto finance.

I have had conversations with car salesmen. They all say the same thing: “I can get you in that car.” They are pretty creative, financially speaking, and will find some way to make the sale, even if it puts you in a perilous financial position. That is not their concern. Their concern is selling cars. The ideal scenario: get a gently used Toyota, pay cash, drive it forever. You win the personal finance game.

You should have $1,000,000 before you buy a new Beamer or a Benz.

Death Metal

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There is a lot of talk that we have already passed “peak car” in the US. With my personal finance hat on, I don’t think that’s a bad thing, on an individual level. Car sales are dropping, which implies fewer people are messing their finances up for a status car? Great!

With my trader’s hat on, it’s not such great news. Declining auto sales are a leading indicator for a recession. Yes, there are other factors at play here—Uber, the specter of electric, trade wars, car-averse Millennials—but it’s been a fairly reliable indicator in the past and shouldn’t be ignored.

Just another reason to register for Robert Ross’s “Any-Weather Income Strategy Summit.” He’s going to be talking about why he believes a recession is on the way, what it means for investors, and what sectors are going to perform best. June 24, don’t miss it. Register (for free) here.


Jared Dillian

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