Cardi B is nominated for five awards at the 61st GRAMMYs on Sunday, including Record of the Year and Album of the Year. But the rapper isn't just known for her music. She's also made headlines for her opinions on everything from motherhood to politics and taxes. She's not afraid to be transparent about her own finances, either: In July, she posted a screenshot of her bank account to Twitter after fans claimed Cardi B and her husband, recording artist Offset, must have leased their matching Lamborghinis rather than buying them outright. Some fans implied that there was no way they could afford two of them.

Cardi B proved otherwise: The photo revealed that she took out a cash deposit of $548,736.97 from her Wells Fargo checking account to pay for the car. She took down the tweet shortly after, but not before followers got screenshots.

Although half a million dollars is far more than the average person can afford to spend on a car, experts back Cardi B's decision to buy, not lease. Jay Leno, car aficionado and host of CNBC's "Jay Leno's Garage," advises against leasing. So does financial expert and former CNBC host Suze Orman. "I always think it's better to buy a car," Leno tells CNBC. "Everyone seems to lease now. Everyone thinks you can write off this and write off that, and to a certain extent, you can. But at the end of the lease, you don't have anything." The comedian and former host of NBC's "The Tonight Show" prefers own assets outright. "I don't carry debt. I own everything. I own my buildings. I own my cars. That way, if it ends tomorrow, I know what I've got," he says. Orman calls leasing a car "the most stupid thing I've ever done with money." Back in 1987, she leased a BMW 750iL in order to show off to the person she was dating. "There was a time that I was in a relationship with a very, very wealthy person and I wanted to impress this person and I didn't have money yet, so I went out and I leased a car," she tells CNBC.