Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.
Keep dreaming.so what happens next? What happens next is no more price hike on new ones from the factory, then no more dealers doing ADM, then more of em start to sit on lots longer chewing up high interest credit lines month after month, then fewer & fewer buyers coming in, then the discounts start, then the interest rates start to ease again, & then someone like me walks in w/ a big chunk of cash down payment & walks out w/ an R @ $30k UNDER sticker
People forget….the above scenario has also been more the norm than the exception for periods of time
You must’ve missed my follow up reply to this where I cite specific examples of this exact phenomenon on high end vehicles only 5-6 years ago, ones that stickered for $70-80k not $110k, even more room to slash price.Keep dreaming.
A long time ago, way way way way back in the olden times of 2018, when I was shopping trucks after my 2015 GMC got wrecked by a deer, I cross shopped everything, I have a quote/offer from a GMC dealer for 2019 Denali ultimate loaded to the gills & $17.5k off sticker…..except that wasn’t decades ago that was only 5 years ago, when gas was like $2 & the GMC financing was 1%!!!
$4 gas, & 5-7% rates & inflation up the a$$ = the scenario I described above is 1000% plausible in the extremely near future, except that maybe the Raptor R & TRX will be more like $40k off sticker
Also- was offer $12k off sticker for a 2018 C7 Z06 vette M7 the exact same time I was shopping for a truck….
Fellas, “trade in” value is not a good benchmark of actual values. Its only a data point. Dealers are desperate right now and will screw you over in any way they can to pull max profit from you. Best way to get a clearer picture would be to pull country wide auction #’s to see what these things are pulling on blocks across the US. Thats a better in-site on the value currently.
I wish MSRP was the price period. If the vehicle is overvalued and tends to go under MSRP, then the manufacturer needs to reduce the price. There shouldn't' be any negotiation process when buying a new car. It makes car shopping harder comparing brands when some brands cost 70K on the website but really 60K OTD, while other brands are 70K on the web and 70K OTD. Saturn back in the day had the right idea, pay the price, don't like it go haggle with Chevy for 6 hours for a cavalier. Sales guys there also didn't work on commission.
Maunfacturers already use rebates to lower the price temporarily when they need to clear out stock.
I don't want to overpay for a vehicle and pay MSRP when the dealer is happy to sell for less. At the same time, I don't feel like I should be guaranteed an MSRP price when some other guy is willing to pay more than me. I'm not against an non-negotiable price business model, but the reality is that I'll likely end up going with the brand where I can negotiate the best deal.
You could argue that Tesla use the set price model now because they don't have any dealer to negotiate a price, and they have (had) a backlog of orders to the point that they really didn't need it. They recently lowered their prices, which really didn't make the customers who just bought at the higher price rather unhappy.
Maunfacturers already use rebates to lower the price temporarily when they need to clear out stock.
I don't want to overpay for a vehicle and pay MSRP when the dealer is happy to sell for less. At the same time, I don't feel like I should be guaranteed an MSRP price when some other guy is willing to pay more than me. I'm not against an non-negotiable price business model, but the reality is that I'll likely end up going with the brand where I can negotiate the best deal.
You could argue that Tesla use the set price model now because they don't have any dealer to negotiate a price, and they have (had) a backlog of orders to the point that they really didn't need it. They recently lowered their prices, which really didn't make the customers who just bought at the higher price rather unhappy.