No-one wants to buy Tuscans any more?!

No-one wants to buy Tuscans any more?!

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Discussion

IanJ74

Original Poster:

9 posts

11 months

Saturday 2nd September 2023
quotequote all
Why is the market completely dead for our Tuscans?
It’s been a half-decent summer, but the same cars remain for sale month after month (mine included)….and that’s with a 30 percent reduction from initial asking price and two years in the trying.
Completely understand that the general sports car market is much slower due to wider economic circumstances out there, and we all appreciate the niche market we sit in as Tuscan owners.
But, it feels like I am being forced to part-ex the car (if the dealer wants to take on a challenge) as the only way out of a much cherished example.
Would be interested to hear any other similar frustrations out there, or am I way off the mark?

sixor8

6,313 posts

269 months

Saturday 2nd September 2023
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I think it's similar for many classic cars, sports or otherwise. I've had my Griff over 2 years and was toying with the idea of selling it but the same ones have been in the classifieds on here, Autotrader and eBay for months without selling. frown So, I'll have to keep it a while longer......

Classic car auctions, despite blowing their own trumpets about levels of sales, are not seeing the sales levels or prices they did 2 years ago when almost everybody was willing to bid online for stuff willy-nilly.

Everything has its price but you'd have to be willing to sell it cheap, or use an auction with no reserve. eek

ETA: I notice Amore auto have no Tuscans in stock, he takes cars on SOR if you can agree a minimum price.


Edited by sixor8 on Saturday 2nd September 18:31

swisstoni

17,097 posts

280 months

Saturday 2nd September 2023
quotequote all
Perhaps an ad in the TVR club might be an idea?
At least you would be preaching to the choir.

LimaDelta

6,535 posts

219 months

Saturday 2nd September 2023
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List it for £100 and it will be gone this evening. Like anything, you just need to price it right. Given that most people are tightening their belts right now, perhaps a single-figure MPG, tyre-shredding, self-dismantling eccentric British sports car isn't that high up on many people's shopping lists? Added to that anyone needing to finance the purchase will be paying a lot more than they would have even 18 months ago.

NicBowman

785 posts

239 months

Saturday 2nd September 2023
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Hi, I have to agree that you can sell anything at a price, just not the price you want in this case.

I was buying a Griff 2 years ago, I can still see cars for sale now that were advertised then. As a contrast, James Agger sold a Griff for £42k recently. Maybe the very best are saleable at good money, careful buyers…

I just switched my Griff for a 3000S. 22 years older, half the horsepower. But at £19k cheap, cheap to own and run (no tax, mot, cheap insurance). Plus it seems really popular with onlookers, old style fun.

Nic

IanJ74

Original Poster:

9 posts

11 months

Saturday 2nd September 2023
quotequote all
Thanks all for your comments, some good thoughts and ideas shared - much appreciated.
Looks like I’m destined however to do the rounds at various dealers to try and get a half-decent offer as p/ex on something else. Already tried a TVR specialist, who attempted their best to sell it for a significant period, all to no avail.

popegregory

1,446 posts

135 months

Saturday 2nd September 2023
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Do you have to sell it? It’d be bad enough watching your car drive off knowing you no longer own such a ridiculous vehicle, a right kick in the nuts of the guy had mugged you for it to boot?

LLantrisant

998 posts

160 months

Sunday 3rd September 2023
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i´m trying to sell my Cerbera since months....not even 1 potential buyer....even no time-wasters contacted me.

observing the classic-car and niche-car market i must say: it more or less came to complete stop!!! besides some brands like Porsche or Mercedes

people dont have money anymore and the outlook in the future looks not promising.
the politicians world-wide are following an anti-human and anti-freedom agenda.

you should not travel, you should not spent money in cars, combustion engines have been given the dogma of evil...and people unfortunately let themselves be carried away by this fear and scaremongering....those who sleep in democracy wake up in dictatorship


Englishman

2,222 posts

211 months

Sunday 3rd September 2023
quotequote all
I know of two Tuscans that have sold very quickly in the last two months, both were in top condition and went for good money. Where is your advert?

2gins

2,839 posts

163 months

Sunday 3rd September 2023
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Took me a year to sell my Chim, eventually got it gone for full asking this time last year but only after putting a new clutch in it (rear main seal was gone). I'm after a Cerb and the Chim was always a stepping stone so the selling decision was easy, but having had the wind in my hair I'd also consider a Tuscan. The things that put me off / make me wary are

1) Twitchy handling reputation - as an owner I know this is down to proper suspension, proper set up by a reputable specialist, decent tyres and most importantly driving style. But not many will look past the pub talk I guess.

2) Engines. The S6 is much maligned and although the AJP8 is no saint either and I read the posts by AM and others on the various forums it is a big worry with a potential £12k bill around the corner. I dare say there's a lot of smoke and bluster about the topic and to be honest I haven't even started trying to blow through it myself.

3) Long term values - many years out hopefully but we can all see a possible future where petrol is a scarce and expensive resource and cars like this are just not desirable to own or practical to use - except as collectors items, which might explain why the very best examples still move for strong money and the rest of the market is struggling. It won't stop me, as I've wanted a Cerb since I was a teenager but how many people are that committed? They can probably accept paying £30k for a car and selling it for £30k in 5-10 years (writing off the maintenance costs and accepting the man-maths figure of £10k in missed opportunity costs if the money sat in the bank earning 5% interest instead). But spending £30k on an asset and seeing the value destroyed by green issues in 2030+, not such a good look.

On top of that, there is the general economic outlook (I timed my sale right and cynically hope to take advantage of a weaker buying market if I can - who wouldn't?) and the big elephant in the room, the increasing legislative creep against older cars in general and ULEZ type zones appearing in all major cities which will put a lot of people off. Why spend £30k on an asset that will attract those kind of levies when if you want a big noisy V8 there are any number of F-types, Mustangs, AMG etc that will hit that spot without it? Wheeler-era TVRs sit in that awkward spot between exempted historics and compliant moderns, so to accept it you have to be a TVR person from the start or live well away from big towns and have no business taking the car into one.

TLDR / sketchy reputation based on pub talk + niche and diminishing buying pool + sailing into the wind on the economy and green issues.

ETA a lot of the above applies equally to Cerbs but there again there are consistently 20-25 cars for sale across the main platforms and by and large they're all the same cars, sitting there with ads refreshed every month. Prices are as low as £21k which I haven't seen for years. I haven't bought yet because I have nowhere to keep it - need to move house which is a long running saga of its own.


Edited by 2gins on Sunday 3rd September 12:10

IanJ74

Original Poster:

9 posts

11 months

Sunday 3rd September 2023
quotequote all
Englishman said:
I know of two Tuscans that have sold very quickly in the last two months, both were in top condition and went for good money. Where is your advert?
Add is on PH. Without breaching PH rules on this type of discussion, it is very keenly priced imo.

ColdoRS

1,809 posts

128 months

Sunday 3rd September 2023
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Yep.

I had my Tuscan up for 2 months earlier in the year and didn’t even get a time wasting e-mail, let alone a tyre kicker.

It wasn’t priced rock bottom but it was fair value, as far as I could see.

Didn’t contact any dealers - unsure what they’d offer? I can only imagine low 20’s?? Unless on SOR of course.

craigjm

17,998 posts

201 months

Sunday 3rd September 2023
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On top of what 2gins says there is a whole generation of drivers now that have no idea what a TVR is and probably a generation before that think of them more as a niche kit car thing. The market can be savage when recognition is not there.

Panamax

4,143 posts

35 months

Sunday 3rd September 2023
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I think a lot of people who think they own a "valuable classic" are going to get a nasty surprise over the coming years.

For instance, who on earth is going to want to buy the thousands of old 911s currently squirrelled away in heated garages?

bad company

18,717 posts

267 months

Sunday 3rd September 2023
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I doubt the issue is restricted to Tuscans. Other TVR’s & sports cars are harder to shift now.

Englishman

2,222 posts

211 months

Sunday 3rd September 2023
quotequote all
IanJ74 said:
Add is on PH. Without breaching PH rules on this type of discussion, it is very keenly priced imo.
Last two times I sold a TVR (admittedly a couple of year ago) PH didn't work for me but https://www.carandclassic.com/ did and within 10 days.

IanJ74

Original Poster:

9 posts

11 months

Sunday 3rd September 2023
quotequote all
Much appreciate that Englishman. Will get working on C&C option!

swisstoni

17,097 posts

280 months

Sunday 3rd September 2023
quotequote all
IanJ74 said:
Much appreciate that Englishman. Will get working on C&C option!
Something else to consider is that it really isn’t the time of year for selling sports cars.
Spring or early summer would be the when most buyers would be looking, I would have thought.

blueg33

36,109 posts

225 months

Sunday 3rd September 2023
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Tuscans are pretty old now and feel it. Even compared to my 22 year old 360 my Tuscan felt dated and my newer Lotus Evoras and the 360 offer a much more enjoyable ownership experience.

I’m glad I had a Tuscan but I wouldn’t buy one again.

2gins

2,839 posts

163 months

Sunday 3rd September 2023
quotequote all
swisstoni said:
Something else to consider is that it really isn’t the time of year for selling sports cars.
Spring or early summer would be the when most buyers would be looking, I would have thought.
I'm not sure this is a thing so much at this end of the market. Discretionary purchases of French CCs and MX5s etc, Yes, but TVRs are a niche purchase and there's so much supply in the summer holding prices down that it's really not a good time to sell, imo