I noticed that several of the cars at BJ did have reserves on them, so
maybe they have changed their practices. I think the no reserve thing may
have kept a lot of cars away. In any event, it appears that you may now
have a reserve on the sale.
Pete
In a message dated 1/18/2015 9:04:39 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,
ronbo97@xxxxxxxxxxx writes:
Of course, there is a risk involved with taking the B-J
route. Cars are sold at no reserve. If you end up with a lousy day/time, the
car may sell for less than it would on Saturday night.
Ron
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, January 18, 2015 6:13
PM
Subject: Re: [Chrysler300] 300-G at
B-J.
I guess the answer is that if you have a really nice letter car and
want to sell it, you should at least consider BJ. Of course, if you
sell it there the proceeds may be taxable whereas if you sell it privately,
uncle will probably not know about the sale.
Pete
Sent from my iPhone
I'm with you Pete, it's a positive thing for letter car owners. There
is a greater awareness.
Heck I would have sold my G to the buyer for $100,000.00, saved the
buyer some dinner money!
Matt O
Sent from my iPad
OK Ryan
Are we better off with the G selling at
$200,000 or at $45,000?
I would submit that having it sell for more is
better than having it sell for less.
Pete Fitch
Sent from my iPhone
IMHO - I think you would be dreaming to think the price of other
G's just rose anywhere near 20% based on one car's sale, especially if
G owners begin to test the market and flood it with inventory. There
just aren't the buyers out there to support the demand at that price
point, even as investments. A knee jerk reaction may ensue to some
degree but I would be surprised if it could be sustained.
Sent from my iPhone
Ryan,
Even if it pushes prices 20% higher it's heading in a positive
direction. It's not unlike a comp for real estate, supply vs demand.
If the BJ auction begins to set a tone and begin the wave then be
ready for the ride. Right after the auction a neighbor (classic car
guy) of mine calls me and tells me about the sale then says "your
car is really valuable Matt, it's easy to thing it's worth less!" If
the car is marketed right, at the right venue you might hit it
right.
Be well
Matt Ostrowski
Sent from my iPad
I don't know about the rest of you but a single sale a BJ
wouldn't sway me to pay more or less today than I would have
yesterday. All it takes is for a couple of guys with more money
(or credit) than good sense to get into a pissing contest over the
same car and the price moves well beyond what the real market will
bare. Time will tell if overall values of all G's will actually be
impacted beyond next week. I wouldn't get too excited just yet or
someone will be posting there dismay at the 'poor' result the next
auction brings when a similar car only brings
$100k.
Sent from my iPhone
Hi Pete,
Stick or no stick that sale just raised the values of all
existing G's. It's a good thing.
Be well.
Matthew Ostrowski
Sent from my iPad
For anyone who missed it a 300-G three speed stick car was
sold for $200,000. As usual the broadcasters had some
things wrong but, for the most part they had good things to
say about the car. I wonder how much of that sales price
was due to the stick shift. Pete Fitch
Sent from my
iPhone
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