Z4MC values (again!)

This is a pretty shocking example of the confidence BMW have in the cars now. Buy now for almost £22k and hand back in two years or pay £6.5k? You can get a new SLK55 AMG for less than that monthly payment.

http://www.bmw.co.uk/bmwuk/bmwauc/d...0JTQlQ5MjAzMExEMzk2MjM=&btp=1x12-distance_ASC

Term of Agreement: 24
23 monthly payments £707.54
On the road price: £21,850.00
Total deposit: £2,185.00
Total amount of credit: £19,665.00
Credit arrangement fee*: £314.00
Option to purchase fee**: £10.00
Optional final payment: £6,504.45
Total amount payable: £25,136.87
Contract mileage: 10,000
Excess mileage charge: 3.96 pence per mile
Rate of interest: 11.81%
Representative APR: 13.2%
 
I renewed the insurance on the Zed today. One of the sites posted valuations after you gave number plate and mileage. My 57 z4 with 31k mikes was valued between 12250 and 10000 trade-in depending on condition
 
Wondermike said:
exdos, I do think you mention a fair few interesting points.
Thanks :thumbsup: Always happy to open debates and be in a minority of one. :D


ucb said:
I renewed the insurance on the Zed today. One of the sites posted valuations after you gave number plate and mileage. My 57 z4 with 31k mikes was valued between 12250 and 10000 trade-in depending on condition
That's precisely what I've found and have been pointing out in this thread. If I were to buy your car from you in a private sale for, say £17,500, as many advertisers on Pistonheads would appear to think a car of your's age and mileage is worth, and I wrote it off, I certainly wouldn't get a cheque from the insurer for £17,500 just because I paid over the odds for an over-priced car!

If book prices or insurance valuations of a car like yours are a maximum £12,250 as a trade in, then I would suggest that an Z4 MC owner with such a car should be prepared to sell it privately for £14,250, because if you fail to attract a buyer in a private sale, you'll only get £12,250 at best as a trade in. A bird in the hand will always be better than 2 in the bush.

Buyers will invariably lose lots of money on the majority of their car purchases, whilst motor traders will always make money on every car they sell. Owners of luxury cars always stand to lose the most, especially when the economic situation is bad, as it is at present and will continue to be for several more years.
 
Guess who's in the market for a New car at knock down price??

Good luck buying a straight, pristine Z4mc for 14.5k

Btw I don't own a Z4mc
 
Guess who's in the market for a New car at knock down price??

Good luck buying a straight, pristine Z4mc for 14.5k

Btw I don't own a Z4mc
 
toplad said:
Guess who's in the market for a New car at knock down price??

Good luck buying a straight, pristine Z4mc for 14.5k

Btw I don't own a Z4mc

I'm totally with toplad on this one.

What a car is advertised at and what it goes for apply to every used car sale, it's not unique to Z4Ms. And as for always buying off a trader over a private seller if the price is lower with the trader, no, I don't think so. Age, condition, spec etc all come into play, and I personally like to meet the owner rather than dealing with a trader.
 
Also, I pay little interest to what any guides say, they have never seemed accurate to me and seem to exist for traders and insurance companies to knock the value of your car down when you sell or write it off. I've never known any guide to or insurance company to value a performance car at what you just paid for it, that just doesn't happen in the real world. For that reason I had an agreed value policy on my GTV should the worst have happened.
 
Prices are driven entirely by the market in which you're buying / selling. To illustrate my point...

Visit www.carsales.com.au and do a search for Z4MC. Convert the $ value to £ and you'll see that every Z4MC for sale in the UK appears to be a bargain to me :-/


Sent from my iPad
 
RidgyDidge said:
Prices are driven entirely by the market in which you're buying / selling. To illustrate my point...

Visit http://www.carsales.com.au and do a search for Z4MC. Convert the $ value to £ and you'll see that every Z4MC for sale in the UK appears to be a bargain to me :-/


Sent from my iPad


Looks like we should all export to Australia then, $64,500 AUD is £43,843!!!! :o
 
Darren Slone said:
RidgyDidge said:
Prices are driven entirely by the market in which you're buying / selling. To illustrate my point...

Visit http://www.carsales.com.au and do a search for Z4MC. Convert the $ value to £ and you'll see that every Z4MC for sale in the UK appears to be a bargain to me :-/


Sent from my iPad


Looks like we should all export to Australia then, $64,500 AUD is £43,843!!!! :o

My point exactly :-)

Oh, and they sold for approx $140k new...!!!


Sent from my iPad
 
toplad said:
Guess who's in the market for a New car at knock down price??

Toplad,

This is not the case: I'm in the market to buy a Z4 MC at the RIGHT price.

It seems to me that most sellers of Z4 MCs think that their 5 or 6 year old cars with an annual average mileage of around £10k miles per year should be thought of as "collectors cars" just because there are limited numbers of RHD Z4 MCs and as such, think that their cars should buck the trend for depreciation of secondhand cars. However, if those cars continue to be used in the same way for another 5 years, then they will all be 100k+ mileage cars: these are NOT collectors cars, they are HIGH mileage USED cars and in a totally unsentimental used-car market, the fact that they are Z4 MC doesn't make them any different to any other marque of BMW. The overwhelming majority of used cars depreciate until they are scapped: they always have and they always will.

In comparison, take a look at a recognised collectors' car, such as the E-Type Jags for sale on Pistonheads: http://pistonheads.com/sales/list.asp?s=290 ALL of those iconic cars are aged between 37 and 51 years old, yet look at the mileage they've recorded in those years! Many of them have total mileages the same, or less than, many of the 5 year old Z4 MCs presently for sale, and some have considerably less and been "mothballed" from their first purchase. Therefore, if a buyer wanted to buy a 5 year old Z4 MC with 60k miles on the clock, which has spent all its time outside in all weathers, as a collectors car, this would mean that the buyer would not be able to drive it for the next 30 odd years or more in order for it to be considered as a relatively low-mileage car in years to come! Why would any buyer want to do that and pay a premium price for the doubtful privilege?

When you buy a car like the Z4 MC, the owners are faced with a very simple choice, either wrap it up in cotton wool from the start and consider it as a very long-term speculative investment, which may, or may not, prove worthwhile, or, drive it and enjoy it and be happy to suffer the depreciation as the cost of enjoyment. If I want to buy a Z4 MC as a potential future "classic car", I'll be looking for one of those ultra-low mileage garage queens and I'll pay the present owner an over-the-odds premium price for it, but that seller would still suffer from depreciation loss. It appears to me that most of the owners of the Z4 MCs presently advertised want it both ways: they want to have had the pleasure of driving their cars whilst piling on the miles but then sell them at collectors' car prices! If the owner hasn't treated their car as "special" by putting it on a limited mileage insurance policy, keeping it under wraps in a heated garage, why should the next buyer think it's so special?

Likewise, so-called "enthusiasts" seem to think that their cars are worth more just because their cars are polished and well-maintained. I am also an enthusiast, and I drive like an enthusiast too, and enthusiasts get low mpgs because we spend more time at high revs, our cars wear out tyres, brakes etc and we do trackdays and generally push our cars harder and cause more wear and tear than most non-enthusiasts! Therefore, most enthusiasts are deluding themselves in believing that their cars have been cherished, when they really mean that they've been "enjoyed" and then expect premium prices when they want to sell them.

dgm said earlier in this thread: "I paid £12k under list for a 10 month old car in 2007 and probably still paid over the odds for it. This means that the entire UK stock of Z4MCs is devalued from the original £44k selling price, let's say to a new price of around £36k, so those who paid the highest price will suffer depreciation the most - that's a simple fact of economic life. As it is, as dgm said, many of the original owners obtained their "New car at knock down price", and so unless owners pass this discount on, throughout the life of the car to new owners then, IMO, they are being greedy.

Glass's guide or other trade "book prices" are the UK's "standard" UK used-car prices which are recognised by dealers, the insurance industry and the Inland Revenue etc. If a seller thinks his car is worth more than those prices, then he is at liberty to ASK whatever he wants, but what he will actually GET is altogether different. All that I have been attempting to do is make the case for sellers to be "realistic" in setting their asking prices in the present difficult economic climate, because if they NEED to sell and they get it wrong, their fate will be that they'll end up getting rock-bottom trade-in price and then they'll see their P&J on a dealers forecourt for their original asking price, or more!

Now, if you were a seller, would you:
a.) set a high asking price and discover you can't get a buyer?
b.) set a realistic asking price knowing that a fellow enthusiast would obtain what you think is a "bargain"
c.) suffer an even greater financial loss by selling your car to a dealer, just to stop any enthusiasts from buying your car as a "bargain"?

As it happens, I have set myself no limit as to what I will eventually pay, but when I see the "right" car for me at what I consider to be the right price, I will happily give the present owner my cash.
 
Why oh why to people rant on and on about car valuations?
Buy it use it,when you are bored with it move it on and buy something else.
You could spend all day discussing the pitfalls of buying this that or the other at the end of the day its only a car.
 
Wondermike said:
This is a pretty shocking example of the confidence BMW have in the cars now. Buy now for almost £22k and hand back in two years or pay £6.5k? You can get a new SLK55 AMG for less than that monthly payment.

http://www.bmw.co.uk/bmwuk/bmwauc/d...0JTQlQ5MjAzMExEMzk2MjM=&btp=1x12-distance_ASC

Term of Agreement: 24
23 monthly payments £707.54
On the road price: £21,850.00
Total deposit: £2,185.00
Total amount of credit: £19,665.00
Credit arrangement fee*: £314.00
Option to purchase fee**: £10.00
Optional final payment: £6,504.45
Total amount payable: £25,136.87
Contract mileage: 10,000
Excess mileage charge: 3.96 pence per mile
Rate of interest: 11.81%
Representative APR: 13.2%

I nearly fell off my chair when i saw the price of that. Beats me where they are coming from with that figure :?
 
exdos said:
Toplad,

This is not the case: I'm in the market to buy a Z4 MC at the RIGHT price.

In your opinion the right price, which may well differ form others' opinions.

exdos said:
It seems to me that most sellers of Z4 MCs think that their 5 or 6 year old cars with an annual average mileage of around £10k miles per year should be thought of as "collectors cars" just because there are limited numbers of RHD Z4 MCs and as such, think that their cars should buck the trend for depreciation of secondhand cars.

But do they really? I don't think of my car as a collector's car. it's a rare car compared to most, but that's it.

exdos said:
dgm said earlier in this thread: "I paid £12k under list for a 10 month old car in 2007 and probably still paid over the odds for it. This means that the entire UK stock of Z4MCs is devalued from the original £44k selling price, let's say to a new price of around £36k, so those who paid the highest price will suffer depreciation the most - that's a simple fact of economic life. As it is, as dgm said, many of the original owners obtained their "New car at knock down price", and so unless owners pass this discount on, throughout the life of the car to new owners then, IMO, they are being greedy.

Greedy? Are you serious? Just like every other seller of a used car, they want as much as they can get. That's how it is when anyone sells anything :| And dgm's experience may well be different to every one else who bought a Z4M, until you get many more examples of what people paid for brand new cars (not 10 month old ones) you're just guessing.

exdos said:
Glass's guide or other trade "book prices" are the UK's "standard" UK used-car prices which are recognised by dealers, the insurance industry and the Inland Revenue etc. If a seller thinks his car is worth more than those prices, then he is at liberty to ASK whatever he wants, but what he will actually GET is altogether different.

Possibly, possibly not. It's not guaranteed as you are trying to make out though.

exdos said:
All that I have been attempting to do is make the case for sellers to be "realistic" in setting their asking prices in the present difficult economic climate, because if they NEED to sell and they get it wrong, their fate will be that they'll end up getting rock-bottom trade-in price and then they'll see their P&J on a dealers forecourt for their original asking price, or more!

Again, you're fond of making huge assumptions, throwing a bit of emotion in to it as well, you're presenting a possible outcome as fact, which is not the case. Those that NEED to sell often start with a competitive price, they don't price them at the top end, and then they may reduce their asking price or accept an offer, but I've not heard of anyone that continually drops and eventually trades it in, they always sell it for more than trade in... Seriously, I've never heard of any one who drops and drops and then trades it in, even for cr4p examples...


exdos said:
Now, if you were a seller, would you:
a.) set a high asking price and discover you can't get a buyer?
b.) set a realistic asking price knowing that a fellow enthusiast would obtain what you think is a "bargain"
c.) suffer an even greater financial loss by selling your car to a dealer, just to stop any enthusiasts from buying your car as a "bargain"?

No, it's not your a, b, c list, it's more a case of:

a1) Set a high asking price and see what happens
a2) Set a high asking price because they're not desperate to sell
b) Set a realistic price to sell in normal length of time. 'Bargain' to anyone does not even come into it!
c) WTF?

For me it's simple when selling a car: I have a car I'd like to sell, I look on Pistonheads and see what they're going for, I might look elsewhere too. I compare my car in terms of age, miles, spec, history, condition and desirability with what's for sale and decide my price. My cars are always in very good condition with good history, well maintained, well specced, so I generally aim towards the higher end and I sell them for very close to asking price. It's not rocket science :D
 
Exdos, as someone with a keen and unbiased eye on what constitutes a fair priced Z4MC. Would be interested to see links to any MC's you've viewed as a prospective purchaser?

You have a very clinical and head driven view on price (nowt wrong with that) but these type of cars do require a large amount of heart to make you part with your cash, as for instance a 2002 1.6 lx focus gets you from a to b at a fraction of the cost but as owners or future owners of said performance cars, we all know that isn't a way we wish to travel :)

I never thought my 'for sale' post would create such an interesting... If often repeated debate lol :)
 
sully said:
Exdos, as someone with a keen and unbiased eye on what constitutes a fair priced Z4MC


When it relates to cars he wants to buy but not those he already owns it seems.

Here's the Pistonheads Z3MC's - price spread £7k to mid £20's (ignoring the ridiculously priced 5 litre). Quite why such a spread shouldn't exist in the Z4MC market in another few years we have yet to receive an explanation.

http://www.pistonheads.com/sales/list.asp?s=574
 
sully said:
Exdos, as someone with a keen and unbiased eye on what constitutes a fair priced Z4MC.

sully, Exdos is not unbiased, he's in the market looking for an Z4MC, and from what i can tell keen to drive prices down.

By the way, seen your ad and I think your car looks fantastic and I wish you the best of luck with the sale :thumbsup:
 
sully said:
Exdos, as someone with a keen and unbiased eye on what constitutes a fair priced Z4MC. Would be interested to see links to any MC's you've viewed as a prospective purchaser?
That would be very indiscrete of me, but I shall be viewing two later this week. One is IMO reasonably priced and the other is overpriced.

sully said:
You have a very clinical and head driven view on price (nowt wrong with that)
And so do car dealers when they're paying owners trade prices and then selling their cars the next day for several ££££s more. I'm not a wheeler-dealer just a savvy-shopper.

sully said:
but these type of cars do require a large amount of heart to make you part with your cash
As I've said in earlier posts I already have a Z3MC that really stirs my soul, and I don't actually "need" to buy a Z4MC, hence my relatively dispassionate outlook. My motoring lust is already satisfied. I'm now old enough and wise enough to know that it is presently a buyers' market so it would be stupid of me to let my heart rule my head and so I will be patient, which allows my hard-earned cash to go further. The thrill of a purchase is still the same though :thumbsup: I don't think that my attitude adversely affects any seller so nobody should be offended, in fact, one owner will benefit when I give them my cash.

sully said:
I never thought my 'for sale' post would create such an interesting... If often repeated debate lol :)
Neither did I! :rofl: If I've thrown a few unusual points into a very old debate as food for thought, then fair enough. :D
 
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