Totally unscientific, but our Cars & Coffee has about 300 cars and most folks are under 30. I do see cars going electric. I'm seeing it first hand in fact with one client.
2017 Results consistent with my commentary.
"vintage car auctions during Monterey Car Week. Across six companies, preliminary numbers show sales totaling $327 million at Pebble Beach over the weekend, down 3 percent from last year "
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...pent-327-million-on-vintage-cars-this-weekend
The greatest exchange in the history of wealth is about to occur. Now is a great time to buy a business that lacks a succession plan.
Collector cars from the 60s and 70s (with the exception of $1M+ vehicles) have plateaued and will never come back. Chase the demographics and the money will follow. If investing, and not driving, is your game buy 80s, 90s and 00s analog manual transmission cars. While you are at it buy 80s BMX bikes and skateboards. My original Redline RL 20 is selling for $5,000 now. I paid $60 bucks for it in 1987.
I just sold my mint 3600 mile GT for $245K. I think thats about market right now. Bought an F40 with the proceeds and some cash.
Statistics
5 million collector cars in USA*
60% owned by Boomers* = 3 million Boomer collector-owners
76 Million Boomers in USA; 3 million collector-owners is 4%
10 Million Boomer projected to pass in next 10yrs
4% of 10 Million = 400,000 cars coming to market over 10yrs or 40,000/yr
*Hagerty/C&D est.
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Collector car sales (>$25K)
20,000 at elite auctions ('16)
60,000 eBay (<1989; ~5,000/mo. *12)
120,000 Hemmings (<1989; ~10,000/mo *12)
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200,000+ Total Market
Adding 40,000 to a market of 200,000 will have impact on pricing.
http://www.caranddriver.com/feature...-classic-car-marketand-could-crash-it-feature
My take is there wont be a crash; just grinding stagnation in certain models OR a sector rotation.
'Glamour' models like 60s Ferraris, Daytona, 275 GTB, E-Types, Astons, Miuras/Count. will march on as new generation embraces glam, retro, swagger of iconic models.
Technical models (design OR horsepower) 911 Air-cooled, 300 SL Gullwing, American muscle will stagnate in flatline for some time
Case in point is the Gullwing, while revolutionary; its becoming "Granpas Exotic". nearly 99% of 1400 owners are over 65 if not 75...some are original buyers. Further, vast majority are driver-quality (rallying is huge) or 25+yr old restorations done in late 80s. The barn-find fetish is a fad.
From 1989 to 2000 their value went nowhere and in real terms, highs of '89 are almost flat to today's prices.
http://www.slmarket.com/wp-content/...0-Series-Price-Chart-SL-Market-Letter-WEB.jpg
My view is they will not move far; between drum brakes, heat-sink interior,meticulous maintenance req's and $50K spare parts....takers will be few. As heirs cant afford insurance/storage AND younger generation don't have mindset of M-B halo (M-B Mom-SUV v. tired/worn blue chip collector.)
Will be great buying opportunity as nearly all 1400 will turnover in ownership in next 10yrs.
Its happened in Fine Art; museums cant afford storage of Old Masters while Contemporary/Modern mid-centruy art is flying off walls.
he kept stating how there was a finite supply of great cars and that more wealth was being created globally thus he felt that prices would continue to climb for many years
Aren't 288 GTO's already solidly in 7 figures?