Should manufacturers lease speakers?


Given the turnover of equipment, maybe it would make sense for manufacturers or dealers to (profitably) lease speakers (or other components for that matter) with an option to buy? I certainly would be willing to pay to live with something (espescially something expensive) for a year or so knowing I could return it without the hassle of selling.
rgs92
Don't forget the negative cash flow that the manufacturer has to withstand as the program is started up.

For example, a pair of speakers that retails for $6000 might be rented for $100 per month (for "full payout" in 5 years). It might have cost the manufacturer $3000 to make the speakers, but he won't recover this initial cash layout for 30 months. At the end of year one, he will have spent $3000 but collected only $1200, so he's out of pocket by $1800 even after collecting 12 payments.

Now, multiply this by perhaps hundreds of pairs of speakers that he might lease in the first year of a leasing program, and it becomes clear that most high end speaker manufacturers can't do leasing. I believe most high end manufacturers are not known to be particularly highly capitalized, and the cash flow burden of having to purchase materials weeks and months before making a sale is by itself already a stretch, let alone supporting a lease program.

Of course, they could always make a deal with a bank that would do the leasing program, kind of like an auto dealer that introduces you to a local bank for a car loan or lease. Maybe this would be more appropriately performed by the high end hifi dealer instead of the manufacturer. At that point, you might as well just get a personal loan or lease from a bank all by yourself, which you could do now.
I don't think it is the financial economics that RGS92 is concerned with, it is having a low hassle avenue to swap out to a new model. If anybody wants a lease, just get the best monthly financing you can find, credit card, home equity, etc. Make your monthly payments and when your sick of your speakers, sell them on Audiogon (residual value), pay off as much as you can, and start over.
Sure. Rough example - Just charge enough in the 'up front' payment to cover most of his initial/purchase/dealer cost. For example - dealer cost on a pair of 10K speakers = 5k. The dealer could charge 4k up front, then charge the $100/month for a 3 year lease. His revenue = 7600 after 3 years, whereupon he gets the speakers back (sells them for 4-5K used/demo) or offers them to the lessee for around the same amount.
But IN regards to westborn's idea, the buy out would make the speakers 10 to 15% over value....who wants that? Plus if the dealer in turn sells the speakers then he made alot of extra money on an already inflated price....I see no good out of this idea....but I am poor and cheap.
Also with so many cases of upgraditis I think a very small section of the Audio comunity would be happy with that buy out.
There are planty of dealers that will repurchase your speakers from you, no hassle. Sure they only give you about 25% of retail. But I would expect the same from a lease (i.e., $10k speakers, $209/mo +tax for 36 mos, not $139/mo).

generally lease terms are dictated by the bank. Sure leasing is great if you can't haggle. But sheesh! What a ripoff. I'm time is valuable, but not that valuable.