mfg Posted Friday at 07:32 PM Report Posted Friday at 07:32 PM 1 hour ago, aardvark said: I can see that from a Buyers point of view... and agree it's like a good thing. For me.. ALL Collectibles are still surging and it suits me that what I've bought (4 differing Sports cars) have escalated to 2X the value that I spent. So the Avanti's haven't surged to (say) the value of a Camaro or Stang, That's good since the entry level is still available. But to me, the Avanti's are on the rise. I like the idea that a younger person with some mechanical talent but perhaps not a whole lot of $$$, can pick up a running but ‘worn’ Studebaker Avanti for $4,000–$8,000. Whereas a well worn 1962 Corvette, similar to the one which I purchased for next to nothing when I was a ‘kid’, now will bring $30,000 and up… Out of sight for many guys starting a new family.
aardvark Posted 7 hours ago Author Report Posted 7 hours ago Good point but I doubt the Youngers even know what an Avanti is. They will more likely look at an old Chev / Chrysler / Ford and more likely than those, some Jap 4 to 6 popper. At least that's what I'm seeing at the Car Shows.
mfg Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago 56 minutes ago, aardvark said: Good point but I doubt the Youngers even know what an Avanti is. They will more likely look at an old Chev / Chrysler / Ford and more likely than those, some Jap 4 to 6 popper. At least that's what I'm seeing at the Car Shows. Hmmm! this is true… people that remember and understand (and care!) what an Avanti is are unfortunately a shrinking group.
Stacey Posted 1 hour ago Report Posted 1 hour ago Can not even count the amount of IS THAT A KIT CAR? What is it???questions over the years. The older folks, seem to know but anyone younger have no clue.
Mark L Posted 23 minutes ago Report Posted 23 minutes ago I'm sure someone will correct me if I'm wrong: I believe Hagerty's values are based on what their database shows as what they and their customers are currently stating as the agreed value of the vehicles, not necessarily what the vehicles will sell for. From that prerspective, Hagerty's values may be inflated. On the other hand, any value ascribed by bring-a-trailer is an an average of the selling price of recently sold examples.
64StudebakerAvanti Posted 13 minutes ago Report Posted 13 minutes ago Hagerty claims their values are based on sales data and automotive expertise. 70% of the sales data is peer to peer, 20% from auctions and 10% from dealers. Like any guide, it is a starting point. Another source is Collector Car Market Review. Their values are generally lower, but their #1 condition is roughly the same as Hagerty's #2.
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