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Buying Poker Chips: Clay, Custom, And Casino Chip Sets
If you're in the market for poker chips, it's a good idea to get the chip which best suits your needs. Poker chips come in varying weights and are made from different types of materials. The intended use should be the primary factor taken...

Playing Poker Online For The First Time
With the exposure that poker has received from television and print media in the last few years, thousands of new players are playing online every day. However, if it weren't for a few things holding some players back, there would be many more...

Poker Betting Methods
You must have developed a great betting strategy playing the regular limit, no-limit and pot-limit games. Now let's see some other methods of betting involved mainly in private games. I will just cover a few for example Set limit, Straddle...

Why 90% of online poker players are lossers.
For many online poker players finding the winning formula is like searching for the Holy Grail. Everyone is promising it and in fairness most are providing it. But here's the thing ... A hell of a lot of players just ain't listening ...

Winter Time Online Poker
Many experienced online poker players will notice that play at the poker cash games often tightens up for the first month after the holiday season. At the low-limit ring games online, our observations show that the percentage of players seeing...

 
Avoid Playing Auto Financing Poker


Finance departments are where dealers make most of their profit (well, financing and after-market products).
Their profit lies on something called the "Finance Reserve." That is the difference between the interest rate the dealer is offering you and the lower interest rate (called the "buy rate") the bank offers the dealer.
For example, lets say you have a credit score of 700. The finance manager offers you a conventional loan through Generic Bank at, say, 6.9%.
But what you don't know, as you sit there negotiating, is that the dealer already has a standing arrangement with the bank that says that any buyer with a credit score of 700 can have a loan at 4.9%. If you go for the 6.9%, the dealer keeps the other 2%. That's the "Finance Reserve." For the dealer, it's just gravy. Cash in his pocket.
Most banks cap a dealer at 3% over the "buy rate," but not all do. According to our latest reports, Ford Motor Credit, for example, has no cap on the dealer mark up. That means you could pay anywhere from 1% to 10% more than what you actually qualify for.
Don't worry, the dealers are not out to get you. This financing reserve sometimes works in your favor. It allows the dealer to offer competing interest rates to consumers who have no chance of getting that rate elsewhere!
Regardless of how cards fall, smart car shoppers get their credit report score and look for loan quotes before they walk into the dealership. You can find more information and receive a no-obligation, free auto loan quote at http://www.buyingadvice.com/

About The Author

Daniel DeHaven is the Editor in Chief of the BuyingAdvice Team (www.buyingadvice.com). He understands the auto business. He's been around it - all of his life. Daniel has been a consumer advocate voice for over 15 years. He has learned every trick and profit ploy car salespeople use... and mistakes buyers tend to make.
Copyright © 2002-2005 BuyingAdvice.com, INC. All rights reserved.

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