Sheehan Speaks
by Michael Sheehan
While 360 Berlinettas and Spyders, 456 GTs and 550 Maranellos and
Barchettas are dropping in price, F40s and F50s are increasing in
value. Why? 360s, 456s and 550s are all massproduction Ferraris, with
more coming off the production line every day. As supply meets demand,
their prices come down. Further, many of these cars are driven on a
daily basis, racking up the miles. With time they become ãjust used
cars,ä albeit very exotic, exclusive and state-of-the art used cars.
But F40s and F50s are entirely different animals. There were only
about 200 factory-built US-spec F40s and around fifty US-spec F50s.
They were the most exclusive Ferraris of their eras (â88-â91 and
â95-â97). When new, all were sold to those with the right connections
to be at the top of the lengthy waiting lists, and the financial
wherewithal to pay $300,000 to over a million dollars for a car that
they would, in all probability, rarely use.
All markets seek a level. Despite a list price of around $300k, the
first few F40s were sold for over $1m. Prices dropped, bottoming out
in the late 1990s at approximately $250k-$275k, before climbing to
todayâs $300k-$350k level.
A new F50 listed for about $450k, but could only be leased, not
purchased. As they came off lease, prices started to rise and never
stopped. Today, a very lowmileage (under 1,000), well-documented and
properly serviced F50 will easily bring a mind-boggling $750k. With
only fifty US cars built, this is the price of exclusivity.
Service problems on both the F40 and F50 are minimal, even when buying
a 500-mile ãgarage queen.ä The F40 tensioner bearings tend to tighten
up, causing the outside of the cam belt to scuff and gall against the
tensioner, leading to belt failure; the bellhousing is magnesium and
consequently emits gases that will cause the clutch hydraulics to
fail.
The major problem with the F50 is its all-electronic instrument
cluster. Prior to purchase, the car should be run through its entire
start-up and electronics check sequence. If some part of the dashboard
is defective÷not an The Italian Superbird. Continued on page 74
uncommon occurrence÷the dash must go back to Italy for a sixmonth,
$10,000 repair. For those not married to their local authorized
Ferrari dealer, an independent Ferrari shop in the US rebuilds the
dashes at one-half the price and with a much faster turnaround. The
F50s had a factory recall for a defective front main seal, and any car
with ultra low miles may not have had the update. Finally, the belly
pan on the F50 tends to hide leaks by holding dripping fluids and must
be checked for pools of problems before purchase.
On both the F40 and F50, excluding F50 dash nightmares, a preventative
trip to your favorite Ferrari expert and a check for $5,000 to $10,000
will resolve all of the hangar queen problems. And if you think $5,000
to $10,000 is a lot of money, youâre right, but not when you are
considering s p e n d i n g $500,000 or more on a car. Besides, as the
saying goes, if you have to ask·
I see no reason, barring global recession, that the prices of F40s or
F50s will do anything but increase, albeit more slowly as we come to
the end of the current market adjustment. For collectors of means
interested in modern supercars, these are the ultimate Ferraris.
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