ATN5
2026-02-26 02:30
lol I’m doing something somewhat similar but for my actual car payments 😂, obviously a more “aggressive” approach from my end
acpd1
2026-02-26 02:32
Absolutely. Love it. As you should.
kokobunji0550
2026-02-26 02:41
Smart idea I would like to know how this goes
backcounty1029
2026-02-26 02:43
Same here. HYA is actually making more than the monthly payment. 0.99% APR helps a ton.
peanutbuttersmack
2026-02-26 02:46
2017 gang. Bought the dip and paid for the Car with the gains.
Zebraitis
2026-02-26 02:47
Awww... That:s so cute.
I bought. With the gains already from my investments.
Which cover all my expenses. And still have loads left to keep increasing the net worth.
It feels like a cheat code for life.
DammatBeevis666
2026-02-26 02:48
Bought model 3 in 2019 with FSD, and wish I could have my money back!
JT-Av8or
2026-02-26 02:51
You think FSD is going to be $100/mo forever? 🤣 that’s so cute! And dumb. It’ll be $200/mo before you know it. Then it’ll have ads unless you go for $300/mo. Then it’ll have tokens and you’ll only get so many tokens per month unless you go for the $350/mo plan.
Have you never seen how subscription models work?
MultigrainMan
2026-02-26 02:52
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 how aggressive
menntu
2026-02-26 02:54
Early adopters often pay dearly. Nonetheless, I find the Tesla driving experience to be superb, taking advantage of the relatively low resale value to buy a used 2022 as well as lease a 2018 M3 for my business. No regrets.
Ascending_Valley
2026-02-26 03:01
Except, they are ahead only by a few years, but not a decade, for consumer vehicle driver assistance in many regions. Many owners aren’t interested, especially at 100+ per month.
The elasticity and eventual competition will check the price. True unsupervised, if and when, I expect will be higher than supervised. I’d bet supervised stays at or below 100, maybe even down a bit. Unsupervised, up to 2x, provided your insurance keeps responsibility (more if Tesla insures).
JacobMaxx
2026-02-26 03:02
Ohhh, ok.
I see now.
I know some of these words. 👀
BeerBaitIceAmmo
2026-02-26 03:10
Yup, at 0.99% interest on the loan it made sense for me to leave the money in the market and make payments.
DaSandman78
2026-02-26 03:12
$100 per month for 12 months is $1200.
For you to earn $1200 every year on your $8000 investment you'd have to be earning \~15% on your investment AFTER taxes, so \~20%.
Thats not gonna happen consistently in a safe manner (otherwise literally no-one would every work :P)
Jonny_qwert
2026-02-26 03:27
I made a similar decision when I bought my car. I used the $10,000 I received from trading in my old car. I had the remaining cash to pay, but I decided to invest in TSLA stock instead and took a loan. My gamble paid off, and the money almost doubled in a year as TSLA’s stock price rose from $220 to $400. I sold the stocks, paid off my loan, and it was a risky bet, but I was willing to hold TSLA for a long time.
[deleted]
2026-02-26 03:29
Given 10 million target, I suspect supervised fsd will get cheaper while unsupervised (if it ever happens) will be lot higher due to additional liability cost for Tesla.
IzzysGhost
2026-02-26 03:42
Take a look at one of the online annuity calculators (Fidelity, Schwab). A 10 year annuity generating $100 a month would cost about $10k.
Chuttin
2026-02-26 04:06
So… you give them $10k today… and over a 10 year period, they
Pay you $100/month or $12k total. So over 10 years you earn $2k off initial $10k. A rate of return of like 3.75% per year. Why?
CitronCrafty7855
2026-02-26 04:12
that’s not quite right! The 10% return you mentioned is actually an annual return, not over 10 years. In 10 years, your return would be 100%. This is just an estimate, but it’s been the average annual return for the S&P 500 over the past 50 years. Also, keep in mind that you’ll lose an annual range of 2% due to inflation.
IPThereforeIAm
2026-02-26 04:21
It’s easy, actually. Just go find a mutual fund that has earned 15%+ the last few years and has a statement of “past results indicate future performance”, and you’re set!
Chuttin
2026-02-26 04:32
Unless I’m misunderstanding, that can’t be correct. It’s an annuity, so the $1200/year includes a return of principal. At the end of 10 years, you have $0 left; you don’t get the $1200/year AND the initial $10k back. You give them $10k, and they give you back that same $10k, plus an additional 2k, spread over the 10 years of payments.
Where’s the 10% or 100% rate of return figure coming from?
IzzysGhost
2026-02-26 04:39
It’s a guaranteed income stream. You have to pay to remove the risk.
Chuttin
2026-02-26 04:42
Buy a 10-year treasury. Current rate is over 4% (more than the annuity example you gave) and tax free at the state level. And annuity growth is ordinary income vs cap gains/interest.
Bad deal all around my friend
IzzysGhost
2026-02-26 04:51
Only gains are taxed on an annuity, unless you used your IRA to fund it.
10 year note pays out every 6 months, so it’s not as liquid.
But yeah, you’re super smart. Have fun.
Chuttin
2026-02-26 04:53
I mean yeah I didn’t say the full 12k was taxed. You brought up an annuity which is an objectively dumb idea in this scenario, and the numbers you used are literally shitter than a treasury. And taxed more (again, yes only the gain but same in both cases; annuities are taxed as ordinary income).
Why do I get the feeling you sell annuities bro ha. Enjoy man have fun in shitty financial product land
fratzba
2026-02-26 05:17
It might work, if the price never increases. Really, the biggest advantage though is that when you get a new car in a few years, you’ll really be ahead price wise. 4 years at $99/mo is a little under $4,800. Way less than the 8 grand.
DaSandman78
2026-02-26 05:54
Haha exactly, OP and many posters here just don't get it :P
Edit: they didnt even catch your sarcasm :P
DaSandman78
2026-02-26 06:16
Its not, those numbers are not real, the poster is misinformed
DaSandman78
2026-02-26 06:16
This is completely wrong.
DaSandman78
2026-02-26 06:17
OP is not talking about an annuity where it gets paid down and you have $0 at the end, he's wondering if he can invest in something that pays $100/month and he still has his full $8k at the end - which doesn't exist
CitronCrafty7855
2026-02-26 06:20
I’m talking about investing to SP500. This is from google: The S&P 500 has a long-term historical average annual return of approximately 10% to 11% (including dividend reinvestment) since its expansion to 500 stocks in 1957. While the nominal average is roughly 10.4% to 11.9% since 1928, inflation-adjusted (real) returns are closer to 7%–8%. Note that annual returns are rarely average, with significant volatility, and returns over the last 10-15 years have often exceeded this long-term average.
Difficult_Half_9049
2026-02-26 06:39
ECCU 7.75% preferreds will help you on this journey. Not financial advice and I work in structured products. Good luck.
Chuttin
2026-02-26 10:29
No one was talking about the S&P your comments are entirely irrelevant my man. Like beyond irrelevant because you’re trying to justify a point no one was even discussing
bj418451
2026-02-26 11:10
Cool story. Now try that with your mortgage, Netflix/amazon subscriptions, groceries etc.
You can then safely retire :)
acpd1
2026-02-26 21:27
You are correct but you are missing the point, I will be using FSD for 6 or 7 months first year, only neeed half the return (~9% to ~10%). With the hopes of anything more go towards growing original $8,000.
Bottom line use less FSD initially and grow your funds, to the point you can cover all 12 months, although I probably won't do that, I will stop at 8 or 9 months.
acpd1
2026-02-26 21:33
It's possible although unlikely in the near term. Also, my plan to earn more than $100 over time, so if FSD goes to $200, rinse and repeat, use less, grow funds to cover etc.
Also, If Tesla can charge $200 to $300 for subscription, they will not allow FSD transfer, which means I would have to get Subscription anyway. I am not going to keep this car forever.
Either way I will come out ahead.
DaSandman78
2026-02-26 22:51
That makes sense - good luck!
JT-Av8or
2026-02-27 17:27
I hope so but where are you getting your idea? The CEO said publicly it WILL go up as it gets better. WILL. I mean… that’s from the horse’s mouth.
JT-Av8or
2026-02-27 17:38
Yeah that lack of transfer is a huge downer. What happens if the car gets totaled? Replacement won’t have it and insurance doesn’t even cover the cost as it isn’t seen as valuable added. It’s definitely a risk buying up front.
Ascending_Valley
2026-02-27 23:48
Ok. He's 100% credible on past statements. I don't doubt he expects this. Market reality is quite strong.
Clearly, I'm not certain, just my outlook on it. I do think an 'unsupervised' version, if/when, would be priced premium to unsupervised.
Capital_Escape_8095
2026-02-28 02:13
Why not just Uber the car for several times a month instead? You get to use the car, the FSD, and spend 8K on crack.
ChairmanLaParka
2026-03-12 12:56
Would it not make more sense to be on the annual plan, so that even less comes out per year ($200 savings)?
acpd1
2026-03-14 03:20
good point. If you can afford to spend $1,000 yes that would make sense. For me, initially i am going with only 6 or 7 months to build equity. I may go to $1,000, if i have built enough equity using SPYi, QQQi etc..