Abercrombie wrote:
PeterE wrote:
But do people have a subconscious reluctance to buy cars that are perceived as "cheap"?
Only if they are snobs. Even then, they have a strong reluctance to buy cars that are perceived as "dear".
I think it's a lot more complex than that. If you sell car "X" at price £Y and then you drop the retail price, you kick the 4rse out of the residual values of the ones that you'd been selling up until you dropped the price. This really upsets your previous customers who:
(a) see that they've had their backsides kicked and
(b) now have a car that (most likely) doesn't really belong to them yet and which they're still paying for - even though they could now buy a new one for the same or less that theirs is currently worth!
Despite my somewhat different taste in vehicles, we are actually very similar in that I never like to spend much money on cars and I certainly don't spend money I haven't got! I never buy new (or anywhere near new) cars, I maintain them myself and I rarely ever spend any money with the original vehicle manufacturer. As they tend to get scrapped (usually by me!) when I've done with them, terms like "residual value" means little to me (depending on how much tax there is left on it and how much fuel is in the tank)! Most people, however, spend a lot more oon their car. They tend not to keep it for very long and it's residual value is important to them. Their motoring costs them the purchase price of the car, less what they can sell it for, plus whatever they spent on it in between. It's a perfectly valid model and it works fine for most people. In fact, they might actually (if they get a good, reliable one) spend little more on their motoring than me!