Why do dealers keep cars for so long without cutting price?

Why do dealers keep cars for so long without cutting price?

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GT03ROB

Original Poster:

13,365 posts

223 months

Sunday 19th June 2022
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There is a dealer near me that has had a certain car on its forecourt for over 2 years now. In that time the price hasn’t dropped or moved. It’s from a premium German brand at over £30k. These cars generally seem to shift fairly well.

Why would the dealer not just move it on or cut the price. Its certainly not a cheap car against the market at current pricing.

Second Best

6,414 posts

183 months

Monday 20th June 2022
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Part of me wonders if it's something financially related, e.g. "we're worth x amount" - maybe for VAT qualifying or something? Just spitballing. I've wondered the same thing myself, there's a garage near me that's had a 1995 Fiesta for sale since 2019. For over £3,000! Unsurprisingly it's not shifted.

sherman

13,436 posts

217 months

Monday 20th June 2022
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It could be down to what they paid for it as a part exchange. Cant reducd the price without taking a decent loss.

It could also be a sale or return for a private client. Client wants X price no negotiation butvis happy to wait for the money.

Second Best

6,414 posts

183 months

Monday 20th June 2022
quotequote all
sherman said:
It could also be a sale or return for a private client. Client wants X price no negotiation butvis happy to wait for the money.
That's a really good shout actually. Dreamer / old doris / someone who doesn't know about cars wants x amount, doesn't really need it, so off the car goes and is gone and forgotten until suddenly a bank transfer for x pops into their messages.

ETA: for some reason this reminds me of that (probably embellished at the least, fabricated more likely) story of someone wanting to take a £5k loan out to take a holiday/remortgage/gamble/whatever and offering a £20k M3 as collateral, the bank happily takes the M3 and wacks it into their private car park. A week later your someone comes back and pays the money back in full, plus interest, which would have been about £15. The bank asks why and they just say "well, £15 for a week of secure parking in Central London isn't bad".


Edited by Second Best on Monday 20th June 02:07

CrippsCorner

2,846 posts

183 months

Monday 20th June 2022
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There's a car i was watching on AutoTrader. No idea how long it had been on there when I 'favorited' it but it was 18 months before it sold on after that, for a KIA with a blown engine! In all that time it was reduced a total of £6 scratchchin wonder how much they actually got for it in the end.

troika

1,874 posts

153 months

Monday 20th June 2022
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I suspect many dealers who hold overpriced stock will be keen to move it once the interest rates start increasing on their stocking facilities.

P675

231 posts

34 months

Monday 20th June 2022
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Does make me laugh when there is snow in the pictures and you tell its been on there ages. You used to be able to tell the date the advert was posted on Autotrader by the URL but they've changed it since.

Mammasaid

3,924 posts

99 months

Monday 20th June 2022
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P675 said:
You used to be able to tell the date the advert was posted on Autotrader by the URL but they've changed it since.
Still does;

https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-details/202109077...

Means it was 1st advertised on 2021 September (09) 7th (07)

Blown2CV

29,073 posts

205 months

Monday 20th June 2022
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dealers do not have very much margin to play with. It isn't anything like what many people (even on here) for some reason seem to believe it is, on new cars at RRP, that do not have an type of additional manufacturer support applied. The car is on credit to the manufacturer, and this is usually 6 months or so, and then the vehicle needs to be paid for in full, at cost price. Cars have very minor updates every 6 months or so, so dealers want to avoid keeping unregistered but paid-for cars for longer than they need to. Sometimes another dealer in the country will have that car sold, and will get in touch do transfer it. This gets more complex if the car is paid for. Often instead the car is registered in the dealers name, AKA 'pre-reg', where it then goes onto the used car book and is the used car sales manager's problem. However there is no point in registering a car that cannot be made cheap somehow, through manufacturer support or suchlike. Sometimes the manufacturer will apply extra support to a vehicle+Model year in order to get rid of them out of the network. However, if they don't do that, then the dealer is somewhat stuck with a car they cannot shift and cannot make cheap unless they want to make a loss on it, which is very bad juju. One loss-making chassis in this sort of instance can wipe out the profit of several other new car deals.

Trevor555

4,466 posts

86 months

Monday 20th June 2022
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Two years is a long time for a car to be sat around.

Is the dealer using it?

Sometimes they advertise a car of theirs, or one their happy using, for a higher price.

Otherwise I'd imagine there's some sort of story with the car that's stopping people buying it?

Let us know if you find out.

But most dealers look to replace stock with fresh if no bites after 3 months or so.

GT03ROB

Original Poster:

13,365 posts

223 months

Monday 20th June 2022
quotequote all
Trevor555 said:
Two years is a long time for a car to be sat around.

Is the dealer using it?

Sometimes they advertise a car of theirs, or one their happy using, for a higher price.

Otherwise I'd imagine there's some sort of story with the car that's stopping people buying it?

Let us know if you find out.

But most dealers look to replace stock with fresh if no bites after 3 months or so.
I can’t see the dealer is using it. Its been there every time I’ve been past. I think its position has changed twice.
I am half tempted to go & find the story!

ThisInJapanese

10,933 posts

228 months

Monday 20th June 2022
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I sold my Type R to a Honda dealer in Swansea last August. It's still there from what I can see. It's now at the price I got for it from Motorway, so they will lose money on it. I've no idea why it's not sold (others have) and at what point they cut their losses and run.

RSbandit

2,627 posts

134 months

Monday 20th June 2022
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I have quite a few cars on my watchlist that are hanging around for months with barely a move in price I would put alot of that down to SOR. For cars the garage actually owns I'd have thought 3 months is the max and then they have to turn the inventory.

M.F.D

704 posts

103 months

Monday 20th June 2022
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I've been keeping my eye on Mk4 Megane RS' and loads I've looked at have been in stock for a while now. I actually out the idea to bed, but if some reduce in price I could be tempted....

vikingaero

10,520 posts

171 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
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Years ago, before buying the Clubman, I was looking at a Volvo C30 T5. There was a Black example up North that proclaimed it was owned by a Doctor that remained on sale for the same price for 3 years. If anything, Doctors are a high insurance risk and not the best drivers in the world, so I would have wanted a discount.

Dan W.

1,196 posts

80 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
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vikingaero said:
Years ago, before buying the Clubman, I was looking at a Volvo C30 T5. There was a Black example up North that proclaimed it was owned by a Doctor that remained on sale for the same price for 3 years. If anything, Doctors are a high insurance risk and not the best drivers in the world, so I would have wanted a discount.
Not sure why a dealer would have given a discount because the previous owner was a doctor.

The 3 year bit of course is shocking, Saying that though we had a Nissan xtrail for 2 years and it sold for its original asking price

gamefreaks

1,976 posts

189 months

Tuesday 21st June 2022
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This doesn’t make any sense to me either.

If I was a dealer, I’d want to be churning through stock.

If you can make on average 10% on each deal and on average a car takes 1 month to sell then you can turn your £30k into £90k over 1 year.

So, if you make a mistake and overpay for a car, it's better to move it on quick, even for a loss than sit on it until prices rise or a bigger idiot turns up...

vikingaero

10,520 posts

171 months

Wednesday 22nd June 2022
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Dan W. said:
vikingaero said:
Years ago, before buying the Clubman, I was looking at a Volvo C30 T5. There was a Black example up North that proclaimed it was owned by a Doctor that remained on sale for the same price for 3 years. If anything, Doctors are a high insurance risk and not the best drivers in the world, so I would have wanted a discount.
Not sure why a dealer would have given a discount because the previous owner was a doctor.

The 3 year bit of course is shocking, Saying that though we had a Nissan xtrail for 2 years and it sold for its original asking price
The point is that dealers like to claim things like: "one careful lady owner", "owned by a Doctor" or "owned by Lord Pissington-Smythe". Anything to give a veneer of respectability and give the illusion of some provenance.

Having worked in Insurance in my early years, Doctors are one of the worst risks on the market and premiums are loaded accordingly. It's likely they could barely drive which it why I would want a discount!

I can understand dealers needing to maximise the churn of cars, but some small dealers in rural areas seem to keep cars for sale for a while.

Wacky Racer

38,275 posts

249 months

Wednesday 22nd June 2022
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vikingaero said:
The point is that dealers like to claim things like: "one careful lady owner", "owned by a Doctor" or "owned by Lord Pissington-Smythe". Anything to give a veneer of respectability and give the illusion of some provenance.

Having worked in Insurance in my early years, Doctors are one of the worst risks on the market and premiums are loaded accordingly. It's likely they could barely drive which it why I would want a discount!

I can understand dealers needing to maximise the churn of cars, but some small dealers in rural areas seem to keep cars for sale for a while.
Why do you say a doctor "could barely drive"?

Poppycock.

anonymous-user

56 months

Wednesday 22nd June 2022
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ThisInJapanese said:
I sold my Type R to a Honda dealer in Swansea last August. It's still there from what I can see. It's now at the price I got for it from Motorway, so they will lose money on it. I've no idea why it's not sold (others have) and at what point they cut their losses and run.
The blue one?