Anonymous wrote:
I think you have endorsed everything I said, you have to access the business to your personal situation.
By this I take it that you mean driving a Cab is the personal choice of the individual who wishes to enter the trade as an owner in a restricted area. The problem I have with your basic argument is that we now live in an era where buying a Cab and plate in a restricted area is major risk. I’m sorry to keep going back 20 years or so but it is relevant.
In this area just over twenty years ago you could walk into a bank and get a certain amount of collateral on your plate, you can’t do that these days. If we both walked into a bank for a loan and you said you wanted a loan of 50k to buy a plate the bank manager would tell you instantly that there is no collateral in a plate and show you the door. If I told him I wanted 50k to invest in property I know for a fact the door would not be an option. That is the difference between a calculated risk and a Gamble. The Bank manager would take a calculated risk that the property will increase with the cost of living year on year, whereas a plate could be worthless tomorrow. If you don’t believe me just go and ask your Bank manager for a 50k loan to buy a plate.
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Risk and gamble are the same thing. No risk no reward that is pretty much universal. Plates may lose their re-sale value but they will still earn money for you if you work them. More cabs may mean less money or longer hours for the same money, but the most likley outcome is higher fares. Look at the De-reg of buses, cuts in service, higher fares in the "free market".
Risk and gamble are not the same thing, in a calculated risk there is a certain amount of certainty, in a gamble there is no certainty whatsoever. That’s why I mentioned the Bank manager scenario. The Bank manager will asses the risk of the Bank losing 50k, with property the risk is highly diminished because property in the main increases in value. With a plate there is no comparison whatsoever because it has no value in law and is therefore a complete gamble as far as the bank is concerned.
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Would £50k buy property in your area, average house costs over £100K and as all other property increases in line with yours the profit is only on paper, the income potential is even worse than a taxi and the bills are much higher, rates, water etc. So what does £50k get you in the way of income ? A plate is entry ticket to the market, an established demand built up over years. Plates have no value only a price, the original question was about investing 25K that opens even fewer doors, I took the figure of £50k to include vehicle, insurance etc, on the road price as such.
50k in this neck of woods will buy you a plate and that’s all it will buy you. If you want a new Cab its going to set you back another 30k. We all know the economics attached to owning a Cab and the benefits an extra driver can bring but we are talking about the initial decision to buy. It matters not what earnings can be made, the relevance is if the speculation of 50 grand plus interest for a plate is a wise choice under today’s climate? You obviously think it is, I take a different view.
You failed to mention the amount of interest you are going to pay on a 50k loan. Your fully covered 50k loan will set you back around 69 grand over 5 years, at an interest rate of 7.9 percent, which is about the national average.
I suppose you realise that the repayments on that loan will amount to around 1150 pounds a month and that in order to get such a loan you would no doubt have to put your house up for collateral. How ironic I mentioned investing in property, because that’s what a bank would require in order to get a loan for a plate, simply because the plate itself has no value.
You also fail to take into account the status of being self employed, lending companies take a very dim view of lending "LARGE" amounts of money to self employed people who work in an industry which has no economic Guarantees. Therefore the loan a person requires may come at a higher interest rate than would be the norm.
Best Wishes
JD