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I already have two cars. Both are regular everyday cars. I love cars,
and wish I could buy something more collectable. Maybe a Saab
900, or something like that. But I don't have money to waste on
additional car depreciation. I would like to buy something reasonably priced which would actually be in demand 5-10 years from now, and retain much of its value. Any suggestions? I am not interested in a pimped out car. I simply love the look of a clean
car in original condition. But again, can buying a car every be a good investment? (with the exception of course of the obvious collectables such as the 65 mustang, and so on)

2006-07-19 17:12:03 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Cars & Transportation Other - Cars & Transportation

6 answers

The 65 Mustang, who would have known that back in 65 it would have been selling for so much today? Kind of like the housing market 10 years ago, who would have known? Cars are rarely a good investment. Most depreciate 50 percent in 3 years. Adding rims, a stereo, and an aftermarket suspension accelerates the depreciation even more.
Buy a car because you like it, not because you hope that other people are going to want it 40 years from now and pay your retirement.
If you are very sure about getting a car for investment purposes, get a car that is very expensive and made in low numbers of production. In other words, keep your eye on the Ford GT (not the Mustang GT, the GT) Keep your eyes on the Maybach. The Bugatti is also a surefire hit with car collectors. Sell grandma's 87 Toyota Cressida, it ain't going to be a classic.
Funny story that you mentioned Mustangs. Back in 1986, I had a neighbor who bought the Mustang SVO thinking that it was going to be a collector's car in the future. He bought it and let it sit in the garage for years. Have you seen what an 86 SVO Mustang is worth? check out eBay at
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/Ford-Mustang-SVO-SVO-COMPETION-PREPARED_W0QQcmdZViewItemQQcategoryZ6236QQihZ002QQitemZ120010892526QQrdZ1

2006-07-19 17:31:40 · answer #1 · answered by a 4 · 1 0

I would say there are 2 cars that keep their value well and that is a toyota camry and a porsche. But both of them still loose value, just not as fast as most other cars. You usually have to keep them 25 years so they become historic before they start going back up in value.

2006-07-19 17:17:52 · answer #2 · answered by justmyjusrty 4 · 0 0

yes its like having a bank account without the bank and the 65 is worth a lot of money right now when it was new it cost around 3 or 4 thousand think what it will be Worth in ten years from now

2006-07-19 19:30:33 · answer #3 · answered by justin o 2 · 0 0

it truly is positive, yet you should judge top right here: a million) Is it protect? Your mechanic ought to be able to allow you to understand for particular, yet each and each and every so in many circumstances salvaged autos are assembled from parts pulled from an awesome kind of quite some vehicles. which may lead on them to very unsafe. regardless of the reality that, maximum human beings of salvaged titles are purely positive. 2) Resale may be detrimental. you already understand that i understand, regardless of the reality that it truly is authentic properly worth repeating. 3) you'll no longer be able to finance the motorized vehicle - a minimum of no longer with out some sort of specialist appraisal. distinct than that, they do no longer look to be lots distinct than widespread autos. only ensure you have become a useful deal and under no circumstances paying too lots. i'd also propose you pull a CarFax or AutoCheck to workout habitual in case you should ascertain what kind of salvage the motorized vehicle is. If it replaced into underwater in New Orleans a pair of years contained in the previous, you likely pick to lead sparkling of.

2016-12-01 23:28:00 · answer #4 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

If you have a knack for it, you can buy a used car cheap and then sell it to someone else for more than you paid for it. I recommend looking for private sellers and private buyers. Remember not to make more than 6 sales a year, else you may need a license.

2006-07-19 17:20:34 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

no unless its already 50 years old

2006-07-19 17:15:41 · answer #6 · answered by caddyshack 2 · 0 0

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