One car a trend does not make. For all you know the buyera 2004 Mamba just sold for $115K with 10K miles, don't think they are falling.
Careful, Ive been saying that here for years now and thereOf course they're falling....
Very similar sentiment to the housing market, although the market will have a floor. Total collapse? Not likely. Price drop? Sure, although that depends a bit on other inflationary pressures, so maybe instead of "price drop" I would say it becomes more "price accessible." There is no shortage of passionate car enthusiasts out there. They just have a different income distribution than those who have fancy fast cars at the moment. For example, eventually, Boomers will die off and there will be some wealth transfer to Millenials, many of whom are car freaks who will happily trade their parents' summer beach house for a 190E or R34 GTR or (gasp) maybe even a Viper. Those whose parents die first get a jump start on cashing in before the housing market floods with dead parents' homes. It sounds morbid, but it's true. That will actually drive prices up for a bit.Careful, Ive been saying that here for years now and there
are many people here who are very mad at me for even
implying it. This Tulip Bubble was created when the Home
Equity market exploded and retiring Gear Heads could suddenly
get $500,000 loans for 2% interest. Of course, why not. The
Hemi Cudas, Hertz Mustangs, and COPO Camaros of their
childhood dreams were suddenly VERY obtainable. As such the
market exploded almost overnight.
That market has been self-feeding ever since. In order to
maintain, Twenty year olds today need to start building up
equity and diving, en mass, towards high speed performance,
or even collectability in general, in order to have the funds to
pay $1,000,000 for our Vipers in the next decade or so.
The same bottleneck that will eventually end this country is the
same one that will kill our hobby - the HUGE gap of ten to
twenty year olds being pushed up against the overwhelming
saturation of seniors will collapse the system. Twenty years
from now, as whats left of us all start heading to the retirement
homes there is literally not going to be enough millionaires
around to pay $1,000,000 for each and every hotrod, muscle
car, supercar, and sportscar that exists, let alone (like you said,)
millionaires who will even like cars to begin with.
With current fuel and economic pressures we are living at the dusk
of the Golden Age of the Gearhead.
When there is a fatality involving a Self Driving Car and deemed it was the Self Driving cars fault, who gets sued?? Car Manufacturers? Insurance Company? Not the Driver, they weren't driving.It's just a matter of time before the insurance companies recognize that the risk of having humans pilot their own cars is so much greater than self-driving cars that the premium will be enormous.
Its a built-in defense system.When there is a fatality involving a Self Driving
Car and deemed it was the Self Driving cars fault,
who gets sued?? Car Manufacturers? Insurance
Company? Not the Driver, they weren't driving.