DaveP wrote: Thu Feb 06, 2025 6:34 pmTwo things:derin100 wrote: Thu Feb 06, 2025 6:21 pm An interesting mix of opinions:
On the one hand, people saying are they want a 35i/35is but that they can’t find one and that there aren’t many available (because there never really were ‘that’ many?).
Yet, at the same time, others saying the ones that are available are “too expensive”.
What they perhaps should be saying is that “they don’t want to pay those prices” not that the cars aren’t inherently worth that.
Furthermore, there’s acknowledgment that people tend to buy these cars not out of necessity but rather as a ‘toy’ to treat themselves. Inevitably, with two-seater sports cars this is going to be a highly seasonally dependent phenomenon.
It’s been a long cold winter…it always is! Therefore, a plausible explanation as to why the ones that have been sitting around for months for sale, over the winter is…just that!
As the days get longer and warmer and potential buyers come out of hibernation, if they want that ‘particular toy’ a couple of £K (which is what seems to be being quibbled about?) more for the toy that the really want isn’t really going to make very much difference.
The reasons IMHO that the ones above are so relatively low in price is that 1) they are leggy 2) the seller is trying to or wants to sell them at the wrong time of year e.g a dealer under pressure of needing a turnover.
There’s also talk of this notional “crash” in prices. However, particularly for good examples of rare cars, I don’t think this stands up. I sold both my E85 Z4M and Alpina Roadster S for good money last summer because they were both very good examples…with low mileage…and at the right time of year! I think those are the crucial factors at this end of the Z4 spectrum, not whether something is a couple of £k one way or the other.
Surely, it’s just simple supply and demand?
1. Last summer you would have been able to ask decent money for those cars. In the past 6 months, the used car market has absolutely nosedived.
2. I don't think the outright price is a problem. It's more the spread of pricing. I've been offered two early 35i SEs with low-ish miles for £10k (one for slightly less). It suddenly becomes very hard to justify a car that's a few years younger with different bumpers being almost double that. When even those early SE cars aren't selling, it's a tough one to explain why those £16-18k cars are worth what is being asked.
Some might suggest that scarcity should drive up the prices of those late M-Sport cars. The problem with that is that people were saying the same thing about the Z4M, relative to the cooking E85s/86s. The bottom has absolutely fallen out of the Z4M market in recent times.
https://collectingcars.com/for-sale/200 ... m-coupe-11
Auctions are the litmus test for all of these things. If there are enough people who want to buy something, it will drive the auction prices up. That 56k-mile Z4M coupe linked above was being talked up at silly prices two years back. It went for £15k when push came to shove in an auction.
Two years ago, it would have made those silly numbers. https://collectingcars.com/for-sale/200 ... 4m-coupe-6
Very interesting! I did note that I had seen a couple of Z4M Coupes at much lower prices than when I had previously looked. I must admit, I hadn’t followed things too closely over the last six months. But, that one you showed on Collecting Cars is REALLY surprising!

I hadn’t reaised things had changed so much in six months.
I must also admit that I bought a low mileage 35i only about 6 weeks ago just before Xmas…and didn’t really pay much attention to prevailing price trends. I just saw it…really wanted that particular car…and just bought without too much attention to the price!
