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#15 |
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Go Blue!!!!!
Drives: 2012 Cruze LT Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Indiana
Posts: 23,290
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#16 | |
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Iatefiberglassinsulation
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Quote:
Vehicles today are just too diverse and theres too many. Back then people feared a car such as a Yenko Camaro, because you could buy one, and tear up the track from day one and nobody could touch you, save maybe another Yenko, or a couple other cars. That was part of the mystique that people remember now that drives them towards wanting to purchase the car at whatever the cost. What did you have back then for tuner cars, Baldwin Motion, Yenko, and a couple others? Now theres 40 tuner models of Camaro none of which offer a model that will blaze performance wise over the others, nor will any be produced in any sort of numbers that it will decimate all over the country. Nor do you have any backdoor options like a true COPO which add to the mystique as well. Theres a decent portion of this country that will look back not on the Camaro, but on the Mid-Late 90's Japanese Sports Car boom, where you could get cars like the Supra TT, RX7 Turbo, 300ZX TT, 3000GT VR4, NSX, etc. They could care less about the Camaro, or Mustang. Or the Sport compact craze with the Subaru STi, Mitsu Evo, Mazdaspeed 3, Cobalt SS, etc. The Muscle Car era of the late 60's was the first real era of its kind, and has since spawned many others. Many of which are just trying to mimic its success. You're right they made a whole boatload of 69's, something like 250k in 1969 alone and because nobody gave a crap about fuel economy dealers stocked V8s cause that is what people bought so most of those cars are V8s of some sort. But as I said and you agreed noone expected them to be of any value some day. That doesn't mean nobody took care of them. Obviously some did. But there are plenty (WAYYYY MORE) of people today who DO believe their car will be worth something some day and DO park the car. In that respect you have to consider that average household income has only risen 31% (in 2005 dollars) since 1967. However inflation has risen 162%. In 1969 (in 1969 Dollars) the average household income was about $23,000, (in 2005 dollars thats about $33k) in 2005 the average household income was $46,000 but the value of that dollar has dropped so significantly that Cars have become much more of a major purchase to someone. Think about it if your household income was $23k in 1969 and a Camaro cost $4k, thats only 17% of your yearly income where now if you make $46k and a Camaro is $40k thats 87% of your yearly income. That means a whole lot more people are gonna take care of their cars because they have a lot more invested in them. My dad used to tell me when he was young his cousins would wreck brand new cars drag racing all the time, go out and buy another like it was nothing, and my family was far from affluent. But back then buying a new car was not as much of a big deal financially as it is today. Finally just because its rare doesn't make it valuable. Tuner cars need that mystique to be exceptonally more valuable than their standard counterparts, and as I mentioned theres no special backdoor options or special versions that are ultra desireable or will decimate all (ie the 427 COPO, or like on the chrysler side a Hemi, A12, etc). Little variables like chicklets and backup sensors noone will give a crap about. A few years ago I found one of six 1998 Trans Am WS6's in Purple Metallic for sale on cars.com I think. After speakting to him I found the guy coudn't give it away because while yes its rare... in the end its a purple Trans Am. Completely extreme example but a good one no less, rare does not equal valuable, there needs to be something to drive it against to make it worth money, between desire, and lack of supply.
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2010 Chevrolet Camaro SS - was daily driver, now toy
2020 Alfa Romeo Giulia Quadrifoglio - Daily Driver 2017 Mercedes Benz GLE 350 - Wifes Car 2008 Chevy Silverado 2500 HD LT 6.0 - Tow Vehicle 1991 Alfa Romeo 164S - Project Car 1994 Volkswagen Golf - Race Car "Like" my race team on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/farfrumwinnin |
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#17 |
![]() Drives: 2010 Camaro SS/RS Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: The Woodlands, TX
Posts: 332
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Wow, I have had a pristine 68 Z28 that sold for $3,500 in 1981 a pristine 69 Z/28 that went for $13K in 1992 and a very nice 70-1/2 Z/28 that went for $4,200 in 1988. Based on the numbers of the new camaros they are commodities that will never go for big bucks in future years because there are simply too many of them. People who invest in cars for a return are the same crowd who bout condos in Vegas to flip over the last couple of years. Go out and modify and enjoy. If you want an investment in a car then go buy a Lamborghini Miura or Ferrari early year equivalent and pray. A car in my opinion is not an investment and with the exception of a few years for a ferrari and a few years for the musclecars the facts will support that.
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Yellow SS/RS
LMR Twisted Slayer 650 RWHP, ARH Headers, Hi-flow cats, Carbon/Organic Twin Disc/Pfadt/BMR/Hurst Shifter/D2forged VS1's |
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#18 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Drives: SUMMIT WHITE 2SS/RS CAMARO Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: 2018: Lakewood Ranch, Fl.
Posts: 8,167
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A good example of hoarding/saving cars for an investment was the new 1976 Cadillac Eldorado convertable. It was thought to be the "last Convertable" and most were covered up and put away in garages. They sold for about $18,000.00 new. Within 10-15years many were all for sale with little or no gain. Today they are still all around and for sale. Foolish investment. Drive and enjoy your Camaro- Life's too short.
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#19 |
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Seriously, I don't really think anyone can predict the future! You can speculate all you want, but those guys who bought all those high-end muscle cars back in the 60's and 70's probably never could even fathom the incredible prices their cars are bringing today. Nobody knows what's going to happen, all we can do is guess and give our opinion. But one little fact that always remains true when buying "old" cars....factory stock is always worth more than "bubba-fied" mods. Only time will tell the truth.....I'll take my chances and keep mine stock. We'll see what happens 20-30 years from now. To each his own....
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#20 |
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It’s not easy predicting the future, however, if you use the past to gauge the future you can assume a few things about the future market,
1) Supply and demand rule, if a car was popular when it was new there should be a demand for it as it ages. The 20 something’s that are beating the life out of these cars, when they reach 50-60 and when to relive their youth will be looking for mint Camaros. 2) In the 80s you could have picked up a Hemi or any other collectible car for next to nothing, how many of us 50+ have sold cars we had as kids and wished we still had it? 3) A well kept car will always bring more money, original numbers matching, well documented low mileage will get top dollar. 4) Your car is the second largest investment you will make, and sorry not all investments we make you rich. But hopefully you don’t lose all your money. |
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#21 |
![]() Drives: 2018 LS Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: poconos,pa
Posts: 187
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I worked at a customers house who had 3 (!) of those retro T-birds Ford put out in the 90s..I remember distinctly thinking - "Who cares?". He had one driver and two as "investments". What a maroon.
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#22 |
![]() Drives: In Transit Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: North Pole
Posts: 334
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retro T-birds! LOL! Some things should stay dead.
Great discussion by the way, I enjoyed it. I think if the next Camaro changes in style radically from the C5, the C5 will go up in value. There's no doubt about it. What will happen is the kids who are 6-12 years old will grow up, turn 40, have loads of money and then wish they could relive their childhood and buy Bumblebee. Lowest mileage wins. It's supply and demand folks. The C5 Camaro is unprecedented. Never before has a concept car played a starring role in a #1 blockbuster of a franchise that spans almost 3 decades and probably more. Never before has a production car been released of a concept that looks ultra-cool but is a little impractical (ie. visibility), that is virtually identical to the concept. Most production cars scale back the coolness to release something that is more ergonomical and practical, not so the Camaro. So people can buy a car that is virtually identical to Bumblebee. Think of iconic movie cars like the Interceptor, KITT or the Bullitt Mustang. Nothing comes close to the C5 Camaro in its place in celluloid history. Every known famous car was based on an existing car. Never before has an brand been resurrected that was iconic in the first place AND looks identical to a concept car first introduced to the entire world on a #1 blockbuster movie. The C5 Camaro will forever live in our collective dreams because it is now in the permanent and persistent collection of popular international art. As academic as the previous arguments for and against are, the C5 Camaro is unprecedented and its future is uncharted. My bet is it's going to be super valuable in the future. Last edited by sen10l; 12-01-2009 at 06:16 PM. |
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#23 | |
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Go Blue!!!!!
Drives: 2012 Cruze LT Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Indiana
Posts: 23,290
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Quote:
Cars should not be an investment. Show me an investment counselor that is recommending buying a car for investment, and I'll show you a guy looking for a job. ![]()
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#24 |
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Go Blue!!!!!
Drives: 2012 Cruze LT Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: Indiana
Posts: 23,290
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#25 |
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Well, I sure wish I would have "invested" in a few '69 Z's about 15-20 years ago!!!! Or maybe a few LS6 Chevelles!!! Or maybe a few '63 Split-Window Corvettes!!! The list can go on and on.... The point is that there are many cars that are incredible investments. You can say all you want that they "should" not be investments....but many are. I full-on agree that you should drive and enjoy your car. But there's no doubt that the potential is there for our beloved Camaro to be a good investment in the future (certainly not right away, but down the road it's possible).
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#26 |
![]() Drives: In Transit Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: North Pole
Posts: 334
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Buying a C5 Camaro is an investment in time. Your time is going to increase in value every second you spend it in a Camaro.
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#27 |
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7 year Cancer Survivor!
Drives: 17 Cruze RS, 07 G6 GT, 99 Astro Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: East Tennessee
Posts: 21,546
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i heard one of the commentators say on one of the auctions that there are now 3 times as many 69 Z/28 Camaros for sale than Chevrolet ever built...
in other words, let the buyer beware... Even on Chop Cut Rebuild they were doing a 69 Yenko "tribute car" which means it is similiar to a Yenko only in looks... Even though it would outperform a origonal Yenko it's never going to be a real Yenko.
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Cancer's a bitch! Enjoy life while you can! LIVE, LOVE, DRIVE...
The Bird is the word! |
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#28 |
![]() ![]() ![]() Drives: 2011 Dodge Charger Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: MN
Posts: 1,070
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Leno wrote a column about a year ago about buying cars. In it he sais that oddball cars would be valuable later on. Things like the first gen prius or the cadillac cts with a manual (because you can't get luxury cars with a manual these days).
He basically said buy something you love because the value of these cars down the road is a crapshoot. At least this way when yer car loses most of its value you're stil driving something you love.
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2011 Dodge Charger
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