ZEE
Is that correct, because it works out at around £41,388.36p
for the BMW M5, which seems cheaper than the old one?
What you need to realise is that British prices and US prices do not correlate under any circumstances. I'll give you a few examples:
- the Saab 9-3 2.0T Linear (the base model in America, the base 2-liter model in the UK) starts at $26400 (£14500). However, the same vehicle in the UK, equipped the same way starts at £19600 - $35800.
- the Mitsubishi Outlander LS starts at $18400 (£10100) in the US, but in the UK it starts at £17000 ($31000).
- the Kia Optima LX V6 starts at $17900 (£9800) in the US, but the Kia Magentis LX V6 (same car, different name) is £13000 ($23700) in the UK.
As you can see, the UK gets raped when it comes to new cars. But fortunately for you guys, the vehicles always depreciate much faster - so a lesson to all UK members:
BUY NEARLY NEW!!!!!
Anyway, back to the M5. Even though this is a crap way of doing it, the US pays about 69.5% of what the UK pays when it comes to cars (based on those three vehicles as an average). Assuming that holds, which it probably doesn't, that $75600 translates into $98300 - or
£53900. Good luck paying that.
There's actually a much easier way to calculate all this, and it's what I did. The old M5 was $69900; the old 540i manual was $53900. The new 540i manual is $58300, so, proportionally, the new M5 should be $75600. Really, it's an educated guess, but I don't see any reason why it shouldn't pan out.