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Auto Leasing Secrets Revealed: --Deceptive Sales Practices |
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By consumer advocate & auto expert Mark Eskeldson |
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Dealers and salespeople claim that
leasing is the "smart" way to drive a car, using lines such as,
"Leasing is simple--instead of paying for the whole car, you only pay for
the part you use." However, consumer advocates and prosecutors have warned
that many people are getting ripped off. In 1994, Ralph Nader said,
"Consumers are getting gouged far too often...It's more like auto fleecing
than leasing." And in 1996, Florida Assistant Attorney General Jack Norris
said, "Consumers are getting robbed."
So who's right, the dealers or the consumer watchdogs?
They both are. Many people have gotten great lease deals, and many others have
been robbed. The ones in the middle ended up with deals that they probably
wouldn't have agreed to, had they understood what was involved in their
transactions.
If you're thinking about leasing, how can you be sure you
won't be overcharged? Or, better yet, how can you know that you're really
getting a good deal? By reading Leasing Lessons for Smart Shoppers.
When you're done, you'll know a lot more about leasing than most dealers (and
automakers) want you to know.
Ford's Deceptive Leasing Practices
In September of 1991, Mark Eskeldson
was on the radio exposing fraud at Sears Auto Centers--and in June of 1992 the
national newswires announced that Sears had just been busted. Now he's blowing
the lid off what could turn out to be the biggest consumer fraud of the decade:
deceptive sales practices that were taught nationwide, over a period of at least
six years, to dealers and salespeople representing the second largest automaker
in the country.
The author has their training manuals and quotes from them
in a shocking chapter on Ford's leasing practices. You'll read how salesmen were
taught to trick people into leases, secretly increase the prices on vehicles,
and conceal those prices so overcharges would not be discovered. You'll read how
former salespeople have testified to these practices, and you'll read about
actual victims who were cheated because of them.
Leasing Tricks & Scams
Salesmen have tricked many people
into leases by telling them that they would save money, but the truth is that
short-term (2-3 year) leasing costs more than conventional buying if the
purchased vehicle is kept for at least 4 years. (And that's assuming the lease
is an honest one.) Deceptive comparisons are often used to convince unsuspecting
consumers that bad lease deals are cheaper than conventional purchases. Instead
of saving money, people are often victimized by secret price and APR increases
because lease contracts usually provide little-or-no disclosure of these
important terms.
To help consumers avoid overcharges, all of the typical
deceptive sales tricks are exposed in Leasing Lessons. You'll also
learn how to calculate your own lease and loan payments, how to do an honest
lease-buy comparison, and how to figure out what you really paid (in terms of
price and APR) on previous leases.
How to Get a Good Lease Deal
If you're the kind of person who would normally buy a new vehicle every 2-3 years, and you don't care if this practice costs a lot more than longer-term ownership, then you need to learn how to negotiate (and recognize) a good lease deal. This book will teach you how to get those "secret numbers" on the real dealer's cost, lease rates, and residuals so you can be sure you're really getting a good deal. And you'll learn how to calculate your own payments, which is the only way to be sure that you're not being overcharged. (Remember this: All of the lease victims had one thing in common--they trusted the salespeople to calculate payments honestly.)
Announcing "LeaseWise"
In this book, you'll learn all about LeaseWise, the only national service that provides competitive bidding to help consumers get the lowest prices on new-car leases. LeaseWise is a new program from CarBargains, the non-profit car-buying service, and is the only program of its kind in the country. And Leasing Lessons is the only book of its kind that mentions it.
"Look before you lease."
Table of Contents
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Paperback, 144 pages
Published March, 1997
In Association with Amazon.com
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What Car Dealers Don't Want You to Know
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What Auto Mechanics Don't Want You to Know |
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