Just looking around (all of this dependent on mileage of course) 550 Maranellos are back down to $100k or less
F355s down in the $50k range too.
A Ferrari 360 is one tempting car for $50-60k...though I doubt you'd ever find one that cheap with a 6 speed manual.
These sound like bottom of the market examples which likely means they're well used & need their services verified.Is it just me or are 80s to 00s (with a few exceptions) Ferraris pretty cheap right now?
Just looking around (all of this dependent on mileage of course) 550 Maranellos are back down to $100k or less, I've seen Testarossas in the $80k range, 360s in the $50k range, F430s under $100k, and F355s down in the $50k range too. I've even seen 458 Italias approaching $100k...which I thought would surely never happen. The 308 and 328 seem to be exempt from these trends, but I was very surprised to see Testarossas and 550s back down to seemingly where they were 10 years ago.
A Ferrari 360 is one tempting car for $50-60k...though I doubt you'd ever find one that cheap with a 6 speed manual.
Phaeton W12 maybe? Other than that, any V12 CL reigns king.I'm not going to say they are undervalued considering the sheer force of will and wallet required to keep them operational, but the Mercedes C216 probably bares the distinction of the most absolute price depreciation of any car, particularly in AMG 63 form, unless somebody can think of something that beats it. Somebody has apparently abandoned one on the street outside my office which to me is effectively loss of all value. A $140k+ car new to valueless in about 15 years - quite a remarkable drop. I realize that clean examples can sell for something like $20-$25k, but that's still an utterly massive drop in value.