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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Private party financing
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<blockquote data-quote="ElscottHavoc" data-source="post: 14220711" data-attributes="member: 93145"><p>I agree with others about focusing on improving your credit. That said, to answer your question though, I'd seek either Prosper.com or LendingClub.com.</p><p></p><p>These are peer lending sites. Multiple investors (plain Jane people and professional investors alike) buy chunks of your loan to fund it and then you pay the group of people interest for their ROI each month in addition to principle. But be forewarned, these sites will track you down and make collections on you just like a bank and everything is highly documented just like a bank too and you will get your credit hurt if you default.</p><p></p><p>That said, finding any other type of financing outside conventional is going to be hard for a car - especially an expensive sports car. Anyone willing to take such risks is going to have some pretty steep fees to offset that risk. I've worked with some hard money lenders in real estate in the past, but never actually borrowed from them, but I know those guys would never dabble in automobiles unless it was a cheap car with high returns. That and hard money lenders are brutal people to work with. If you were thinking of buying a $60k house, I'd say "let's talk", but a $60k car - I'll pass (not that I'm in a position to fund you anyways).</p><p></p><p> <em>Posted via <a href="http://topify.com" target="_blank"><strong>Topify</strong></a> on Android</em></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ElscottHavoc, post: 14220711, member: 93145"] I agree with others about focusing on improving your credit. That said, to answer your question though, I'd seek either Prosper.com or LendingClub.com. These are peer lending sites. Multiple investors (plain Jane people and professional investors alike) buy chunks of your loan to fund it and then you pay the group of people interest for their ROI each month in addition to principle. But be forewarned, these sites will track you down and make collections on you just like a bank and everything is highly documented just like a bank too and you will get your credit hurt if you default. That said, finding any other type of financing outside conventional is going to be hard for a car - especially an expensive sports car. Anyone willing to take such risks is going to have some pretty steep fees to offset that risk. I've worked with some hard money lenders in real estate in the past, but never actually borrowed from them, but I know those guys would never dabble in automobiles unless it was a cheap car with high returns. That and hard money lenders are brutal people to work with. If you were thinking of buying a $60k house, I'd say "let's talk", but a $60k car - I'll pass (not that I'm in a position to fund you anyways). [i]Posted via [URL="http://topify.com"][b]Topify[/b][/URL] on Android[/i] [/QUOTE]
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Private party financing
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