If the dealer will let you. Once you sign papers, the car is yours. If the dealer takes pity on you, they might make a clean swap. Chances are they will offer to buy your new car from you for way less than you purchased it for and then sell you another car. So you would have a new loan to pay plus the rollover from your old loan. It wouldn't be worth selling in my opinion. If you want to sell your car, try selling person to person first. Get what you owe for it or you will have to pay the difference with your own money in order to get the title in the mail and transfer to the new owner. Then go to a dealer and get a new car and new loan. My best advice if you absolutely can't stand your current car.
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Depends. If you just bought it and haven't put many miles on it, perhaps. It depends on how far they are willing to go to accommodate their customer and if they've alraedy filed the paperwork for the registration. Call them and see... can't hurt to ask.
Conservatively, $180 million
There is no such thing as a time limit. When you buy a new car and drive it off the lot it instantly becomes a used car. Of course you can turn right around and trade it in on another new car in 60, 90, 120, etc days, but you will pay the difference in what this used car you are trading in is worth, and the new car sticker, which will be less that what you paid. I think you are really asking if there is a cooling off period on the purchase of an auto and the answer is no.
That totally depends upon the terms of the lease that was signed.
One can purchase buses in Canada from Major Vehicle Exchange a dealer of used shuttle and wheelchair bus specialty. They also sell shuttle buses, tour buses, used and new buses.
No, it's on the New York Stock Exchange.