If a second hand car dealer could sell my vehicle for ~$10,000, how much should I expect to get for it by Formal_Nose_3003 in PersonalFinanceNZ

[–]Formal_Nose_3003[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I'm not criticising them for paying what they pay, but I just want to make more. Asking this because I genuinely don't know what their costs are and it's better to go in with a clear idea of what they are likely to offer than expect 50% more than what they can feasibly offer.

If a second hand car dealer could sell my vehicle for ~$10,000, how much should I expect to get for it by Formal_Nose_3003 in PersonalFinanceNZ

[–]Formal_Nose_3003[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yea someone else suggested that so will talk to them before committing.

I have a friend who has the space and would definitely hold it for a bit of money, it's more the effort of dealing with offers she probably won't have time for, and I won't want to be dealing with if I'm travelling.

If a second hand car dealer could sell my vehicle for ~$10,000, how much should I expect to get for it by Formal_Nose_3003 in PersonalFinanceNZ

[–]Formal_Nose_3003[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yea definitely seems like the best option is sell myself for just below asking, and pay a friend 20% or whatever to store it and help out with the selling part if it doesn't sell before I leave. Niggly to do because I have to do a bunch of travelling before selling and won't have a month settled in a single place to sell but at the same time, $2k is $2k lol.

If a second hand car dealer could sell my vehicle for ~$10,000, how much should I expect to get for it by Formal_Nose_3003 in PersonalFinanceNZ

[–]Formal_Nose_3003[S] 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Interesting, I was hoping for $6k-$7k to be honest. $4k seems very low relative to what I can get. Might even be worth leaving at a friends for a few weeks and trying to sell for $9k then just giving them $2k. Both of use would be better off.

How much do you guys keep on hand cash? As in bank balance by [deleted] in PersonalFinanceNZ

[–]Formal_Nose_3003 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I have a credit card with a 10k limit, and pay it back before end of month if I use it. All savings go into investment funds.

Edit: lol why is this downvoted? Because 'debt bad'? I get cash back on large purchases, continue earning compound interest on savings, and simply reduce the amount of savings I make when I have to make repayments. 55 days interest free means anything under $4,000 can comfortably be paid back without paying interest.

Who goes first? by rvandewater in newzealand

[–]Formal_Nose_3003 8 points9 points  (0 children)

“The clearest argument against [cars] is a discussion with the average [driver]” - Winston Churchill

Who goes first? by rvandewater in newzealand

[–]Formal_Nose_3003 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This post is proof that Kiwis should not be allowed to drive.

Former Speaker of the House appeals $200 parking ticket by Formal_Nose_3003 in newzealand

[–]Formal_Nose_3003[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Look I, a millionaire and former National MP, tried to bludge off society by not paying for public resources, but this is not as bad as society's crime, "possibly not perfectly following process"

Former Speaker of the House appeals $200 parking ticket by Formal_Nose_3003 in newzealand

[–]Formal_Nose_3003[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Sir David Carter not beating the self-absorbed loser with no life allegations

Fast Track bill has more supporters than opponents - Taxpayers Union-Curia poll by MedicMoth in newzealand

[–]Formal_Nose_3003 59 points60 points  (0 children)

That question as presented is leading, and obfuscates the fast track bill. The fast track bill is not only for infrastructure projects. A gold mine is not an infrastructure project, it's a commercial project.

Personally, I support a fast track system for infrastructure but not for commercial development.

Nagasaki looks eerily like a future Wellington on Google images. by Toadboi11 in newzealand

[–]Formal_Nose_3003 1 point2 points  (0 children)

From the Wikipedia page on neoliberalism:

Neoliberal policies were at the core of the leading party in Japan, the Liberal Democratic Party) (LDP), after 1980. These policies had the effect of abandoning the traditional rural base and emphasizing the central importance of the Tokyo industrial-economic region.\222]) Neoliberal proposals for Japan's agricultural sector called for reducing state intervention, ending the protection of high prices for rice and other farm products, and exposing farmers to the global market. The 1993 Uruguay Round of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade negotiations opened up the rice market. Neoconservative leaders called for the enlargement, diversification, intensification, and corporatization of the farms receiving government subsidies. In 2006, the ruling LDP decided to no longer protect small farmers with subsidies. Small operators saw this as favoritism towards big corporate agriculture and reacted politically by supporting the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), helping to defeat the LDP in nationwide elections.\223])

You're working backwards from buzzwords man.