RE: Coys Blenheim Palace sale results

RE: Coys Blenheim Palace sale results

Author
Discussion

cheddar

4,637 posts

175 months

Monday 20th July 2015
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firebird350 said:
I have a sneaking regard for the Karif
You're not alone, I love them, and can even forgive them their 'DFS armchair' front seats.

Did it sell at 15k or not meet reserve?

Joe911

2,763 posts

236 months

Monday 20th July 2015
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greggy50 said:
Paid 29k sold for almost 120k not bad!
Lets call it 110 - but yes, not unhappy. I am sure I spent the difference on the car during my ownership - or close to it - but regardless you never normally get those costs back - a happy ending. Of course I could have made 50k more by keeping the car garaged and NOT driving it.

firebird350

323 posts

181 months

Monday 20th July 2015
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cheddar said:
firebird350 said:
I have a sneaking regard for the Karif
You're not alone, I love them, and can even forgive them their 'DFS armchair' front seats.

Did it sell at 15k or not meet reserve?
Sold at £15,635 - Coys' advert put the estimate at £9K-£11K which I thought was way too low but there was no mention of a reserve price - neither did it say No Reserve'.

It did look nice though - see below:



Sauriel

114 posts

106 months

Tuesday 21st July 2015
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964 RS for 113k? thought they were 150k+

405dogvan

5,328 posts

266 months

Tuesday 21st July 2015
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Is "Museum Quality" a euphemism for "has been polished a bit but otherwise hasn't turned-a-wheel or seen a garage in decades?"

It looks tatty even in the pics...

The price on that 911 is just bonkers - people talk about this being the 'boom which won't bust', they talk about prices reaching a level and staying there, but that can't/won't happen as long as some cars are clearly worth SO much more than others.

No matter what a car's perceived value, it's only as valuable as the demand which exists to buy it and it's really hard to imagine some cars gaining any value given recent prices paid.

The SZ was cheap but they've been a lot cheaper - they are a real oddity in that they're worth a fraction of what some far more common Italian metal is - and they're WAY prettier in real-life than in pictures too.

k-ink

9,070 posts

180 months

Tuesday 21st July 2015
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HeMightBeBanned said:
The article fails to mention the very large number of cars that didn't reach their reserve. Chatting with a classic car dealer mate, he reckons that this is symptomatic of the market because people are losing confidence in the elevated values of classics and aren't so willing to sink daft sums into them.
At this stage of the game all the smart people will have already sold up. Anyone entering the fray now is likely to be the last man standing.

jshell

11,070 posts

206 months

Tuesday 21st July 2015
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k-ink said:
HeMightBeBanned said:
The article fails to mention the very large number of cars that didn't reach their reserve. Chatting with a classic car dealer mate, he reckons that this is symptomatic of the market because people are losing confidence in the elevated values of classics and aren't so willing to sink daft sums into them.
At this stage of the game all the smart people will have already sold up. Anyone entering the fray now is likely to be the last man standing.
Gold at a 5 year low, gas and oil likely to go down in the short/med term and interest rate rises on the cards lead me to strongly agree with you.

Joe911

2,763 posts

236 months

Tuesday 21st July 2015
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Sauriel said:
964 RS for 113k? thought they were 150k+
It depends heavily on mileage, and condition.

405dogvan

5,328 posts

266 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2015
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k-ink said:
HeMightBeBanned said:
The article fails to mention the very large number of cars that didn't reach their reserve. Chatting with a classic car dealer mate, he reckons that this is symptomatic of the market because people are losing confidence in the elevated values of classics and aren't so willing to sink daft sums into them.
At this stage of the game all the smart people will have already sold up. Anyone entering the fray now is likely to be the last man standing.
and I think that's been true for a while tbh - a lot of collections have been cleared-out in the last year, unless you're in the market for something truly rare and spectacular - the "once in a lifetime" sales - most classics I see right now are plain overpriced and the quality is going downhill as everyone tries to cash-in.

It's hard to imagine making anything at all on current prices (even before the cost of keeping a classic is considered) but a drop would require people to need to free-up the money they have tied-up in their cars and we've proven unwilling to put any stress on the wealthy even when they are criminals so I guess that's gonna take a while to happen...

k-ink

9,070 posts

180 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2015
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Maybe when the Euro crashes a lot of things will experience a sharp correction.