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What Should I Trade This In For

How long should I wait before I trade my car in?

You can trade a car in anytime you want, there is no law against you tradiing in a car at anytime. Decide what you want in a car, good mileage ot high torque and horsepower. If your loooking for a small car with good gas mileage but still have the get up and go your looking for look at the 2010 Chevy Cobolt SS. Or the 2010 v-6 Camaro. Your not going to find what I would call good gas mileage and the power in one package, your going to have to be willing to make some tradeoffs. The Cobolt is small, but a blast to drive. The Camaro is a bit bigger but has the new DI engine shich gives you plenty of power ad decent gas mileage becasue of the DI engine design.
Good luck and I hope this helped,
Doug

I have 110 Ethereum should I trade it In for BTC?

Ethereum isn’t reliable in these market conditions, because most of the ERC20 based ICOs raised funds through Ethereum and they started panic selling in this bear market to fund their projects. ETH is dependent on BTC movement just like any other crypto. If btc goes down 25%, there will be 50% downside for other cryptos including Ethereum.TA forecasting is not good for BTC. It could go as low as 3.5k dollars eventually, i’m excluding the short term bullish movements. That’s not good news for Ethereum, i would suggest having 70% fiat and 30% BTC.Best of Luck.

What should I write in trade name for GST?

If you are having official name of your business or shop,like the one you have on your visiting card or sign board you can use that for Trade name.Otherwise insert the name you have on your Pan card.Regards:)

My car is on its last legs should i trade it in for a new car or get another beater car?

I have $5000 which i can put a down payment on. Or should i get another beater car for $5000? the transmission is slipping on my dodge neon and it will cost more to fix then the car is worth.

Should I trade commodities?

Yes, why notA commodity is a basic good used in commerce that is interchangeable with other commodities of the same type. Commodities are most often used as inputs in the production of other goods or services.A commodity market is a market that trades in primary economic sector rather than manufactured products.What separates commodities from other types of goods is that they are standardized and interchangeable with other goods of the same type. These features make commodities fungible. This means that two equivalent units of the same commodity should have mostly uniform prices any place in the world.The sale and purchase of commodities are usually carried out through futures contracts on exchanges that standardize the quantity and minimum quality of the commodity being traded.Commodities can generally be divided into four categories:Agricultural: This category includes food crops (e.g., corn, cotton and soybeans), livestock (e.g., cattle, hogs and pork bellies) and industrial crops (e.g., lumber, rubber and wool)Energy: These include petroleum products such as crude oil and gasoline, natural gas, heating oil, coal, uranium (used to produce nuclear energy), ethanol (used as a gasoline additive) and electricityMetals: Precious metals (e.g., gold, silver, platinum and palladium) and base metals (e.g., aluminum, nickel, steel, iron ore, tin and zinc)Environmental: This category includes products such as carbon emissions, renewable energy certificates and white certificates.For complete guidance on how to trade and generate profits check out our bazaar trading. If you want to generate good returns on your investment by trading commodities. Get the best technical and fundamental analysis in stock trading and commodity from our experts.

Should I trade in my car or sell it privately?

You should first see how much your car is worth, go to kbb.com put the info of the car in and it will tell you how much it's worth, this website will also tell you the value if you trade it in, sell it privately, and how much the dealer might sell it for. if it's in really good condition and is a attractive car, try selling it privately. If the car is not in good condition trade it in. Depending if your in a rush to sell, selling privately can take a long time. If your going to trade your car in don't just go to the first place you come across of, get different prices, I have seen differences from the thousands when trading a car in and some of these dealerships will try to rip you off, so be careful.

I would like to trade in my car for a motorcycle but...?

This is how it works:

You owe $14,500 on a car that is worth $11,500. This gives you $3,000 in negative equity. In order to trade the car in, the loan has to be paid off in full, and the title has to be transferred to the dealership, as they will be the new owner of the vehicle. What will happen is the dealership will be willing to pay the $11,500 that the car is worth. Part of the $3,000 in negative equity can be tacked on to the new loan (on the motorcycle). However, you need to keep in mind that banks lend money based on "loan to value". This means that the amount they will loan is directly proportional to the retail cost of the vehicle. Most lenders will not exceed 125% of loan to value, to include tax, title, and license. In this case, you want to buy a $6,000 motorcycle. The lender will allow up to $7,500 for this vehicle. Remember, though, that this will include tax ($480 - estimated at 8%), title and license (estimated at $250), giving you a total of $6,730. You will have $770 ($7,500, which is the max they will lend, minus $6,730, which is the vehicle you're buying) to put towards your negative equity. In order to pay the car off, you will need to come up with an additional $2,230 as a down payment. The down payment is needed to pay the original loan off in full.

I think what's confusing you is the that you looking at what the vehicle is "worth" $11,500. You have to consider what you owe. If it was paid off, you could trade strait across, and get money back. If it was worth the same amount of money that you owed, the trade is a non-issue. However, you owe more than it is worth. You must pay off the loan in order to trade it in. It wouldn't matter if the car was "worth" $150,000. If you owed $153,000, you'd still need to come up with an additional $3,000 to pay off the loan.

Considering that most motorcycle loans are figured at 36-48 months, your payments, after putting $2,230 down, figuring a 6% interest rate, would be between $228 (36 months) and $176 (48 months).

Hope this helps...

Edit: On a side note, make sure that the $11,500 you say is the trade value, not the retail value, or the private party resale value. If it isn't trade value, you're even further off. If you tell me the year, make, and model of your car, I can be more precise in the calculations.

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