This was a purchase. Honestly never done a lease before...only purchases. I’d lose money on a lease...I can’t stop driving the Stinger.
Sounds great Bear! What part of the country are you in? I'll assume west coast with a nice discount like that, but who knows?...
I would never lease due to several factors, but I have discovered the lease cash portion of a lease incentive. Think of it as a Credit Card company offering: "We will give you $250 cash if you spend $3k on the card in the first 3 months." Out of 100 people that take it up, 60% tell themselves they'll quit the card before the annual fee and as soon as they get the $250. In reality, 90% keep the card for well over a year, and far too many people carry a balance on their Credit Card. Ack!
But the Credit Card company (the bank behind them really) is more than willing to give away $250 to the scant few that take the card, put $3k on it within a few months time, pay the card off each and every month, and then cancel the card. It's the more than acceptable cost of doing business.
Well, lease cash is looking more and more like this type of a situation. I'm after a GT RWD. The lease cash is $5400. Kia Financial (that is, the bank behind them) will throw a rebate of $5400 against the price of that model for a 36 month lease.
Come the fall, I should be able to get the dealer to tear of $2k - $2,500 for the lease price (much like you did for your purchase). Add the two together and the negotiated "Capital Cost" is $33,600 or so. The starting point of where everything is valued at for the lease at that point.
There is a lot that goes into after that point, but like the Credit Cards, MY move is to pay the monthly lease payments for 3 months, then pay the remaining 33 month stream of payments and buy the car for a residual of around $21,000 - $22,000.
It's complicated, and each lease is different with early buyout penalties or late buyout penalties, etc... But the point is, I could potentially save a few more thousand off the total price I pay for the car, vs a straight up purchase.
It is a LOT more work, and it isn't one-and-done and I own it. Rather, it is the entire lease negotiation, carefully reading the entire agreement - and understanding everything about it - and then 3 months in, going back and paying it all off, and basically going through all the purchase paperwork at that point to actually buy it. If it can save me an extra $4k or so, it's worth if for me.
I'm still looking into this, but it's available to people, but I'm guessing 99% of those that purchase are not aware of playing the cards this way (I had never heard of this until this forum the other day), and those that lease, 80% run their lease out close to term. The rest walk away because they can't afford it, and some buyout. The bank accepts the small % of players that play the purchase game with the lease, but it's a small, small, number and an acceptable one at that for all the leases they pull in.