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Job worries? Hyundai has a deal for you

Posted Jan 05 2009, 11:38 AM by Karen Datko
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Are you confident that the ailing economy will rebound quickly? Apparently Hyundai is betting that you aren't. Under the new Hyundai Assurance plan, if you buy or lease a new Hyundai and lose your job within a year, you can take the car back without credit hassles.

Depending on what the car is worth at the time, you may not even owe another dime.

This may be what it takes to get nervous buyers into showrooms. Of course, there are a few little hitches in this unusual marketing approach. Among them:

  • The Hyundai Assurance benefit is worth up to $7,500 and is based on Hyundai's determination of what your vehicle is worth "based on the average of your dealer's appraisal and the values from leading industry guides," the company says. That amount is applied to what you owe. You pay the difference if it's more than that.
  • You have to finance or lease the car to qualify.
  • The offer is limited to those who involuntarily lose their job, get transferred overseas, become disabled, lose their driver's license due to physical impairment, are self-employed and file for bankruptcy -- or accidentally die.

Robert Farago at The Truth About Cars wrote about Hyundai Assurance and got plenty of feedback from readers. Many said it sounds like a good deal.

"One of the reasons why consumers have cut back spending so much is fear of what will happen in the future and this program tries to address that," reader "Acd" wrote. "... It certainly stands out among the clutter of toe-tag-athon clearance events."

Some readers said that considering the depreciation of Hyundais, $7,500 would probably cover what you owe if your down payment was a decent amount.

"Excellent marketing," "Buickman" said. "Something GM will never learn."

Related reading:

Who makes the highest-quality cars?

Auto sales crash and burn

Car sales: The Achilles heel of auto bailout

GMAC is giving your money to subprime buyers

Comments

 

CertifiedTech, yeah right, i have made alot of money scrapping out warranty parts from Hyundai, even sold them on ebay to poor unsuspecting consumers that needed a new head for their one year old car.  maybe if you got one under 20k, you might get some use out of that rusty piece of crap. dont feel bad working for them and you should have stated at Nissan though! ha!

Pammie, I read your link. On the first page it says, "walk away from negative equity" **

the ** is up to $7500. You are responsible for the remainder of the loan.  This would have to be done immediately as to have the vehicle title released.  Hyundai has one of the worst resale values in the auto industry. Your chance of walking away is slim.  Unless you put at least 50% down and purchased a $15000 vehicle.  It is one way for a car company to advertise and drum up business with something that is already done in the car business anyway.  You have always been able to take a vehicle to a dealership to 'buy' it from you, but you are responsible for the difference. Just like Hyundai is saying.  Good marketing!

My Hyundai has over 130,000 miles and I've done nothing but the timing belts. I go through tires faster than I do anything else. If you want a good car that will last, get a Hyundai and don't listen to the idiots who want you to pay more!

you americans make me sick with all your whining about the US car industry where workers are overpaid and obviously didn't save for a rainy day. if ppl were more responsible with their money when times were good, and didn't overspend like the economy could never collapse as it did, you wouldn't be in this situation. it's a case of how the US banks screwed the americans and now you're blaming foreign car makers? please, if the demand is there for foreign cars and their companies who produce them without US gov't financial aid, who're you to bash them? it's time to take a good look at yourselves and figure out what YOU can and are willing to do for your beloved country!

CarBusiness, pay attention! The dealer pays the remainder of the loan! Hyundai pays what's left over, the "difference."

Keith, the benefit of $7,500 is the negative equity not the value of the car! duh

You  know negative equity (depreciation)!  they give you the value and the depreciation! wow I just love it... negativity with no research... do research and the negative becomes quite positive!

www.truthorfiction.com/.../autodonations.htm

This was THE TRUTH about donations website THAT ACTUALLY LISTS foreign manufacturers whom did dontate (although not a heck of a lot compared to North American Auto,foreign and domestic, manufacturers)

This was not the list made up of just favouring North American!...just decide on where monies really go in need in North America that's all...

Mark is proud of scamming "poor unsuspecting" people? Wow, and you are probably the guy calling car dealers crooks, aren't you?

Squirt?????..........Take it easy there buddy We are all friends.

car business... read the rest.  The dealer is required to buy it back for the value and the Assurance pays the "Negative equity" (the difference between the value and loan payoff balance) of up to $7500 not like anything ever before.  You just don't get it.

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