My neighbour James Roxburgh has a problem: his 42,500-mile, 1997-reg Ferrari F355 Berlinetta manual is now worth so much money, he daren’t drive it. He paid £34,000 for the car five years ago in a private deal but has just been offered £80,000 for it by a specialist dealer.
“When I bought it, I assumed it would never fall much below £35,000,” he says. “Now I daren’t take it out of the garage in case I damage it.”
Welcome to the crazy world of used supercars, where sky-high prices for the best examples mean enthusiasts such as James have cars so valuable that they’re terrified to drive them. Tim Marlow, head of the prestige division at Magnitude Finance, a vehicle finance broker that will do £75 million of business this year lending about £70,000 per car, says the rising number of lenders is partly to blame.
He explains: “It’s very competitive and some of them encourage customers into deals by selling this fantasy of all cars going up in value month after month. Some, like the Ferrari F355, do – although they have to be dead right, mileage and provenance-wise – but others, like the Ferrari Testarossa, peaked a couple of years ago and have actually started to drop back. Despite what some lenders say, not all supercars are guaranteed to make money.”
Marlow says responsible lenders need to know what’s rising in value and what isn’t because many purchases are financed on a form of hire purchase that has a final payment, called a balloon, at the end of the term. The higher the balloon, the lower the monthly repayments.
However, the customer has to eventually pay the balloon – unlike a personal contract purchase deal, there’s no handing the car back and walking away. A 60% balloon on a Lamborghini Gallardo is typical, but if the car isn’t perfect in every way, it won’t be worth that. This means that should the owner try to sell it to the trade to settle their debt, they may face a large shortfall.
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Caveat emptor
This is a bubble that doesn't need to burst to cause grief for the unwary. Even before you factor in the next (imminent?) downturn, oversupply and consequently falling prices, most owners find maintenance and restoration costs crippling. These have increased far faster than selling prices over the last 10 years.
Giulio Alfieri
Although Alfieri will always be remembered for his time at Maserati, he is less well known for developing the Countach 5000S, QV and Jalpa. I seem to recall, in an interview with a British motoring magazine, him stating that the majority of Lamborghini's customers viewed their products as 'jewellery'. I guess not that much has changed in the last 30 years. Alfieri was not only an engineering genius, he was also a realist.
TBC wrote:
People view Lambos as jewellery? Well, that's good, because people normally take care of their jewellery.
That is probably it's true worth not £200k
I fthe engine blows you would have a major problem even at a £60k investment, but there must be many fools chasing up prices to almost new prices .