is this a dodgy bike deal?

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voodoochilli

Active Member
Location
Knighton, POWYS
If it's £250 cheaper, and now you have this information - I would evaluate how much the risk involved is to you. If you buy it, it's unlikely for the credit card company to take it from you, just make sure you get a receipt. AND haggle with him so its £500 cheaper...offer him cash
 
OP
OP
B

bunter

Regular
well I phoned the bike shop where he's getting it and they told me they dont give a shoot cos theyve got the money. so I asked for the finance company and phoned them and they told me they dont give a shoot what he does with the bike after he's bought it, the deal they have is with him and he's the one they would chase.

phew, glad thats sorted. off to get the bike later, my first full carbon, happy days...
 

P.H

Über Member
Sound a right dodgy character, but as you've discovered there's nothing illegal in what he's doing.
As with most small credit purchases it's an unsecured personal loan, the bike is his to do what he wants with and the money is owed by him.
 

Archie_tect

De Skieven Architek... aka Penfold + Horace
Location
Northumberland
Must be an incredibly expensive bike if he can knock £250 off the price to you and not be losing out on the price he paid on interest free credit...
cheap way to borrow money though... people could borrow money on interest free credit and invest it for a fixed term and get reasonable interest on money they've never had as long as they've got the monthly payments covered....
 

Brains

Legendary Member
Location
Greenwich
Must be an incredibly expensive bike if he can knock £250 off the price to you and not be losing out on the price he paid on interest free credit...
cheap way to borrow money though... people could borrow money on interest free credit and invest it for a fixed term and get reasonable interest on money they've never had as long as they've got the monthly payments covered....
That is how most house mortgages work .......
 
off to get the bike later
I'd also stay well away from this bike and the seller TBH.

There are loads of great genuine used bikes out there, many that have hardly turned a wheel since the Olympics.
full carbon, happy days
Hope everything works out, but, I wouldn't even buy a second hand carbon jobbie off a family member TBH, never mind someone who'd already lied to me.
 

P.H

Über Member
Must be an incredibly expensive bike if he can knock £250 off the price to you and not be losing out on the price he paid on interest free credit...
cheap way to borrow money though... people could borrow money on interest free credit and invest it for a fixed term and get reasonable interest on money they've never had as long as they've got the monthly payments covered....

I think it's probably a very dear way to borrow money. I've yet to see anything sold with interest free credit that couldn't be bought considerably cheaper with cash, I was looking at a bike from a store with a 15% discount which couldn't be used with the credit option. Then I assume that the £250 saving is against the best price available, so the seller has paid over the odds, then sold at a discount. Say it's a £1250 bike, it could probably have been bought for £1100, discount £250 off that and sell for £850, there was probably a 10% deposit of £125, so he's borrowed £725 and owes £1125. still think it's a clever way to raise money?
Either he's a crook and has no intention of paying back the loan. Or he's desperate and grabbing at any way to raise money he can find.
 

TheDoctor

Noble and true, with a heart of steel
Moderator
Location
The TerrorVortex
You know the guy ?
No, but if he's lied once, he'll do it again.
If someone's so desperate for cash that they'll buy something on credit and then sell it for £250 less than they paid, do you really think they'll pay the credit company? Or not report it stolen for insurance fraud?
I wouldn't just walk away - I'd run.
 
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