kcrane
Well-Known Member
This idea has probably been debated before, but I don't recall. Maybe the current economic climate lends itself to the idea.
Imagine there are two people. One plans to buy a boat, the other wants to sell. For the sake of debate I'll assume the boat is £250k's worth of a reasonably modern model from one of the well known manufacturers.
Mr Buyer, an experienced boater, can afford the annual running costs but thinks the market downturn will continue into 2009 and depress pricess further. So he is holding off buying.
Mr Seller is moving out of boating, but is not desperate, he isn't forced to sell. He thinks that the current market conditions are temporary and that prices will return to more normal levels given a year or so. What hurts is the annual costs of having a boat sat in a marina. At circas £15k for marina, insurance and maintenance costs it is a gamble whether to wait it out or drop the price.
If Mr Buyer and Mr Seller get together and agree:
Mr Buyer can use the boat
Mr Buyer will pay Mr Seller a monthly amount
can it be a win/win?
Thoughts:
Mr Seller will want to know Mr Buyer is competent
Mr Seller will need to know the boat is insured
Mr Seller needs to believe the income offsets the wear and tear & emotional attachment
Mr Seller needs to accept the boat isn't instantly available for sale
Mr Seller needs to know Mr Buyer has the funds
Mr Seller will want a deposit
Mr Buyer wants to avoid lump sum payments, in case the boat sells
Mr Buyer will want a deposit to be held in 3rd party hands
Mr Buyer wants the boat to be insured, in case he dings it (or some-one else does)
Questions:
How do you avoid it being a full-on charter, triggering the need for the boat to be coded?
Not a problem if it is coded.
How do you avoid the income to Mr Seller being taxable?
Not a problem if the amount Mr Buyer is paying matches the genuine running costs as there is no profit.
Thoughts?
Imagine there are two people. One plans to buy a boat, the other wants to sell. For the sake of debate I'll assume the boat is £250k's worth of a reasonably modern model from one of the well known manufacturers.
Mr Buyer, an experienced boater, can afford the annual running costs but thinks the market downturn will continue into 2009 and depress pricess further. So he is holding off buying.
Mr Seller is moving out of boating, but is not desperate, he isn't forced to sell. He thinks that the current market conditions are temporary and that prices will return to more normal levels given a year or so. What hurts is the annual costs of having a boat sat in a marina. At circas £15k for marina, insurance and maintenance costs it is a gamble whether to wait it out or drop the price.
If Mr Buyer and Mr Seller get together and agree:
Mr Buyer can use the boat
Mr Buyer will pay Mr Seller a monthly amount
can it be a win/win?
Thoughts:
Mr Seller will want to know Mr Buyer is competent
Mr Seller will need to know the boat is insured
Mr Seller needs to believe the income offsets the wear and tear & emotional attachment
Mr Seller needs to accept the boat isn't instantly available for sale
Mr Seller needs to know Mr Buyer has the funds
Mr Seller will want a deposit
Mr Buyer wants to avoid lump sum payments, in case the boat sells
Mr Buyer will want a deposit to be held in 3rd party hands
Mr Buyer wants the boat to be insured, in case he dings it (or some-one else does)
Questions:
How do you avoid it being a full-on charter, triggering the need for the boat to be coded?
Not a problem if it is coded.
How do you avoid the income to Mr Seller being taxable?
Not a problem if the amount Mr Buyer is paying matches the genuine running costs as there is no profit.
Thoughts?