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The fact that the entire global economy may be one huge bubble waiting to burst, has nothing in particular to do with the 911 market. |
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Which isn't to say that it definitely is a bubble on the brink of collapse, just that the last 18 months show how much of the market depends on herd psychology and the whims of wealthy collectors. |
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Oh, jeez. Time to move this thread to the loonie board.
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Look...
It's all BS until you actually go and try to buy one of these in good to nice condition. Not in 2011, not in 2012, not last year...today! I'm not really interested in your success story of 2 years ago. I'm interested in your buying experience today, not your observation of what's for sale or what's not selling. After you've shopped seriously a bit, like many of the 'want to buy' guys on these forums have shared, then get back to us about the so called bubble. Until then...it's just speculation, and in my opinion, not valid. |
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Really the whole debate is tiring because nobody knows the future, bubble deniers and believers alike. |
Well, some of us are old enough to remember the bust in the early 90's. I saw a formerly $1M Ferrari F40 sell for $350K to name just one example. So anything can happen.
And there's demographics as well. When I started going to car shows the "can't loose" investment cars were, believe it or not, top-level Model A's. This caused any Model A that still sat on 4 wheels to be dragged out and restored and flogged. Then it was T-birds, and so on. This article sums it up well: Baby Boomers Created the Classic-Car Market—and Could Crash It – Feature – Car and Driver But wait, none of us Porsche owners will never get too old to care, right? Hmmm, maybe all those cheap Tips are worth a 2nd look. I could store a bunch of them for 10 years and make a killing! |
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In fact, it's part and parcel to any legitimate bubble that a large contingency believes with utmost certainty that they can't lose; otherwise, they wouldn't be buying. I wouldn't be surprised if unmodded Supras and GTRs become the hot collectible in 10 years or so. |
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Will the value of air cooled 911s decline 20 or 30 years from now? Quite possibly. Do I personally care? Not one bit because I will still be driving mine. |
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The value of these cars has to derive from the fact that people still enjoy and relish the unique driving experience they offer ... otherwise they might as well be the Duesenbergs of this era, anyone still buy those these days ? Having said that, I must admit I've yet to see a 930 or a longhood being driven around in the south bay. Heck, I see more 356's than those ! |
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The only question is: how long can this go on before the bubble bursts anyway? We saw in 2001, 1987, 1929, etc., that it cannot go on forever. No loonies here. |
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I drive a long hood and multiple 1976 930's weekly in the North bay.
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Didn't I just recently see a $600K S in black, RHD? Or was I dreaming.
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:rolleyes: |
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