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Future InvestmentShite. Your up and coming classics are our concern.


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Posted
19 minutes ago, barefoot said:

Is that for sale?

 

Not at the moment.

Posted

As a bit of a Rover fan, I cant see a lot of them being worth anything amazing in less than 30 years. A SD1 is only worth £1500. 

Of the lot, heres my scoop - BRM200, 200VI, Coupe Turbo, 620TI, ZT190, ZS180, Diesel Express.

Posted

I mean this is case in point. £2,000 for a 90k Mondeo V6, not even an ST200, it’s the power sappingly shit automatic. Get in the sea... it’s £600 no more. 

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Posted
12 minutes ago, sierraman said:

I mean this is case in point. £2,000 for a 90k Mondeo V6, not even an ST200, it’s the power sappingly shit automatic. Get in the sea... it’s £600 no more. 

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For sale is not the same as sold though - they’ll surely not get that for it. 

  • Like 1
Posted
22 minutes ago, Kiltox said:

For sale is not the same as sold though - they’ll surely not get that for it. 

My thoughts exactly. Just like the mk2 carlton saloon GL on eBay for over 5 grand. I sold my near mint restored CD 2.2 for 1750. Emailed him to give him a guide value as he claims to not know how much it’s worth.... it’s still on there 12 months later. 

 

https://rover.ebay.com/rover/0/0/0?mpre=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.ebay.co.uk%2Fulk%2Fitm%2F163959193564

Posted

CXs are unlikely to be worth anything - there are too many flippers in the market and many of the cars in their hands are too well-known for much profit to be made.

Posted
2 hours ago, barefoot said:

I disagree, a pile of rusty bollocks Escort 1 or split screen VW are worth a few pounds.

I’m not saying that knackered old rust buckets are worthless, more that nice examples that have been well kept will be more desirable, hence being the better “future classic” investment.

Posted

The issue for me and I think many others though is that cars creep in value, while they're doing that you have to store and maintain then to a good standard. All fine if you have loads of cheap storage and time to work on them. I have a fairly scruffy e28 520i that's already cost me £2500 in storage, I'm never going to see that back!

My mk 1.5 Panda might do OK, it's in my garage at home and only cost £250, another couple of days work and £50 will see it MOT'd, then of I write my time off that I've spent on it I could see a profit... Maybe.

Barring semi exotica I think the usual hot hatches that teens lusted after/owned in their day are a good bet.

A straight E36 M3 would be my choice, usable, fast, reliable and fairly* easy to work on.

Posted

If I had a large barn I would be snapping up all of the Xsara Picasso's that I could fit in it. Selling at very low figures at the moment and a very practical future classic. Citroen fans tend to be a loyal bunch creating a future demand for them.

  • Like 1
  • Haha 2
Posted

70s Cadillacs are going to rocket, you watch.  It'll happen about a week after I sell Huggy for bugger-all.  Works every time!

Seriously?  Top power and/or luxury variants of most cars will lead the charge, as they usually do.  Mercedes won't be able to live on their perceived history, they've been overtaken by both BMW and Audi, who have aggressively chased the mass-market.  Their hot models will drag the mundane up with them.  Ford have survived the onslaught and the same will happen, the hot models will lead.  One thing I don't see is a big following for diesels.  They are intolerably common now and the more modern they are, the more trouble they seem to be.

Posted

I'm thinking (optimistically) that Jaguar XJR6s should start to go up soon, but they have remained unappreciated for a very long time despite being quite rare in terms of production numbers. We shall see.

Posted

I can't really see any 2000 era cars becoming valuable. Most won't last due to inbuilt obsolescence and parts being NLS, and i think future generations won't be interested in cars in the same way.  Can't see anyone getting nostalgic for an 05 Civic their dad had for a couple of years on pcp before he chopped it in.

  • Like 1
Posted

About the only one of my fleet which may start creeping upwards is the Accord Coupe - think there's only 70 or so 2.0 VTec-yos left in the UK, as the majority have the rorty V6 3 litre jobbie.

Posted
33 minutes ago, Snipes said:

I can't really see any 2000 era cars becoming valuable. Most won't last due to inbuilt obsolescence and parts being NLS, and i think future generations won't be interested in cars in the same way.  Can't see anyone getting nostalgic for an 05 Civic their dad had for a couple of years on pcp before he chopped it in.

“We used to scrap Sierra/Escort Cosworths because they were fucked and worthless” etc 

Posted

Future investment shite? Usually things I've already sold ? . To echo kiltox and snipes points above though, whilst right that we used to bin all manner of shite which is now collectable, the issue with a lot of 2000s cars will be people's attitude towards them. For the past ten years at least ( probably more, probably since the dawn of easy finance) people's attitudes to cars have changed. In my childhood, people only really scrapped cars when they were completely fucked structurally cos everything else was mendable. Not so these days. Following that logic I think the biggest bar to a large collecters market in 2000s cars will be available numbers.

Posted

Always fancied an early 2.5 boxster 2.5 in red with gingercaters

Posted
1 minute ago, bangernomics said:

Always fancied a high mileage 3.2 boxster in silver with gingercaters

Step this way sir 

  • Like 1
  • Haha 2
Posted
4 minutes ago, Matty said:

Future investment shite? Usually things I've already sold ? . To echo kiltox and snipes points above though, whilst right that we used to bin all manner of shite which is now collectable, the issue with a lot of 2000s cars will be people's attitude towards them. For the past ten years at least ( probably more, probably since the dawn of easy finance) people's attitudes to cars have changed. In my childhood, people only really scrapped cars when they were completely fucked structurally cos everything else was mendable. Not so these days. Following that logic I think the biggest bar to a large collecters market in 2000s cars will be available numbers.

People have always bought cars on finance and changed them often. It is not a modern phenomenon. The only thing that has changed really is that “premium” brands are now in on the act and heavily into offering lease/PCP. 

Posted
6 minutes ago, Kiltox said:

People have always bought cars on finance and changed them often. It is not a modern phenomenon. The only thing that has changed really is that “premium” brands are now in on the act and heavily into offering lease/PCP. 

Not really though. I'm 38. When I was a kid and most of the way onto my teens almost nobody we knew had a car on tick. Some people had better cars than others due to differing income but not many in the 80s and early 90s that we knew had cars on hp. You must agree that more people do now surely. I don't think it's a bad thing by the way

  • Like 1
Posted
8 hours ago, The Old Bloke Next Door said:

Owned this Express since October and had five inquiries asking if its for sale.

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Not too surprised since they only built 317 of them. Would love an Express 160 to use as a work van.

  • Like 4
Posted

Will ‘old cars’ in general continue to rise in value year on year though? All though the 2020s and 2030s as petrol/diesel cars start to be replaced by EVs amongst the everyday car owner/users? What happens post 2040 when petrol stations start to shut down due to lack of demand and you have to get fuel from a smaller and smaller network? 
 

People will always want Ferrari’s and Jaguars even if they can only drive them round a track, but all this speculation in things like Ford Escorts is going to crash one day. Maybe not 2025 or even 2030, but sometime around the middle of this century the game will be up. 

 

Posted

Read an interesting thing about the value of Elvis memorabilia recently.  Apparently values have declined a lot in the last few years as the true fans willing to pay good money have died off and the demand just isn't there.  Similar thing with early (vintage?) cars, not commanding the prices they once did because few people have much attachment to them.

Sad to say I agree with posters above that a lot of young people don't give a shit about cars, there's not even the demand for mobility as they are constantly in touch on their phones.  When I was 17 I would have killed for a Cosworth (or even a warmed over Fiesta), I can't see too many 17 year olds being that bothered about today's Ford range. 

Posted
11 minutes ago, cort1977 said:

Sad to say I agree with posters above that a lot of young people don't give a shit about cars, there's not even the demand for mobility as they are constantly in touch on their phones.  When I was 17 I would have killed for a Cosworth (or even a warmed over Fiesta), I can't see too many 17 year olds being that bothered about today's Ford range. 

Indeed. It's a sad fact but many of my friends will probably lust over an old watch, phone or pair of designer shoes when they're older. Most of them don't care about the old outright- all they want is new stuff. Brilliant for me though, and future classics I might want could be affordable!

  • Like 1
Posted

Audi A2 but they'll max out at 5k

I loved mine. 2 billion mpg. Infinite room. Weird bonnet. Handbrake made from hopes and wishes.

 

Posted

Anything porsche. I remember when 993s were not that dear.... as a student any car was out of reach at the time.

  • Like 2
Posted
15 minutes ago, sdkrc said:

Audi A2 but they'll max out at 5k

I loved mine. 2 billion mpg. Infinite room. Weird bonnet. Handbrake made from hopes and wishes.

 

@320touring disagrees I’m sure 

Posted

I think MGF's will go up in value. I remember when MGB's could be bought for £250-£300. Also anything that is in really good condition. Grandad's car that has been hardly used and garaged all it's life. There will always who remembers the trips to the beach, to the theme park or family holidays in what ever car they had at the time. People will be willing to buy a good one, complete with rose tinted glasses. Landrover Defenders will retain their value, provided they don't get stolen and again anything luxurious. They will always be in demand.

 

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