Sheehan Speaks by Michael Sheehan
Paraphrasing Oscar Hammerstein II from ãShowboat,ä ãFish gotta swim,
birds gotta fly, and Iâm gonna watch new Ferraris depreciate till I
die.ä
One of the extraordinary things about the ãinstant collectibleä market
is its predictability. Over the past few decades, we have watched
Plymouth Prowlers, Ferrari Testarossas, Dodge Vipers and 328s run up
the slope of inflated values, then free-fall off the cliff towards
ãjust a carä pricing.
This month, weâll take a brief look at the market conditions for ãgold
chain cars,ä specifically 360 Modena Spyders. Next month, weâll visit
the world of bluechip collectible Ferraris, where important cars
continue to bring strong prices.
Comparing a 250 SWB or even a Daytona to a 360 Spyder is uninformative
at best and ludicrous at worst. All serial-production Ferraris built
after 1990 are still depreciating except for the limited-production
F40 and F50, which have gone up in value. Consider that 16 years after
308 QV production stopped, they are now fully depreciated. Ferrari
328s have a little farther to fall, and 360 Spyders are going to be
worth less every year until 2017 (roughly). By then, they will be as
ancient as a current 308 and their performance will pale when compared
to the latest, greatest iteration from Ferrari 16 years from now.
The current slowdown of the economy has caused the pages of Ferrari
Market Letter to be inundated with ads for latemodel Ferraris. This is
an easily predicted market correction. When first introduced in April,
MSRP for a new 360 Spyder was $180k. The first few out the door sold
on the secondary market for $375k, a premium of almost $200k. Within a
month, the richest and least patient kids on the block had one parked
in their (probably marble-surfaced) driveway, so supply increased and
prices went down to $350k.
Now that several hundred have been delivered to the US, these cars
have steadily dropped in price at a rate of about $20k a month, and
are now down to about $260k. While this may be a substantial decline,
it was to be expected as more cars came on the market. And, after all,
itâs still $80k over window sticker for what is just a used car. I
wouldnât be surprised to see them trading at MSRP within three months.
If youâre trying to sell a contract on a yet to- be-delivered 360 for
$100k over sticker, or expect to get your money back on a car you paid
$300k for, I suggest you get in line behind the whiners who bought
3Com stock last year and are demanding that their brokers get them
their purchase price back.
From my perspective as a trader, I expect a continued, precipitous
decline in the over-inflated prices of late-model Ferraris. After all,
remember when 1989 328s were $125,000 cars and Testarossas from the
same year were bringing $250,000 and more?
At the same time, I find no lack of demand for unusual, rare older
cars. Interest rates are low and, for those in segments of the economy
relatively unaffected by the current events, now is a good time to
buy. Iâll discuss this in detail, with documented transactions, next
month.
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