Scoobys must be selling like hot cakes
After 3 years of happy motoring I decided to sell my scooby and put it in the Autotrader. For the first 6 weeks on-line I received one phone call.
For the second 6 weeks on-line having lowered the price slightly from £10k to £8.5k (still two weeks remaining) I have received no less than 40 (forty) phone calls.
It was a Terzo reasonably priced for the milage.
Has anyone experienced a change in market conditions as I could have probably got a lot more for it.
PS No more phone calls please!
For the second 6 weeks on-line having lowered the price slightly from £10k to £8.5k (still two weeks remaining) I have received no less than 40 (forty) phone calls.
It was a Terzo reasonably priced for the milage.
Has anyone experienced a change in market conditions as I could have probably got a lot more for it.
PS No more phone calls please!
Was it this one?..............
1998 SUBARU IMPREZA Turbo 2000 Terzo 4WD 4dr Saloon
1998 Special Edition No 96 / 333, FSSH, AC, CD changer, cat 1 alarm, original condition with brake upgrade at last service.
?????
1998 SUBARU IMPREZA Turbo 2000 Terzo 4WD 4dr Saloon
1998 Special Edition No 96 / 333, FSSH, AC, CD changer, cat 1 alarm, original condition with brake upgrade at last service.
?????
People are still out there looking for cars, the problem is the 2nd-hand prices have taken a hit.
I found the same a few years back trying to sell my VW Golf GTI. Pristine condition, 6 years old and only 35,000 miles. Parkers had it listed at £6995 for A1 condition. Mine was like new inside and out, with no pain work defects (other than a few stone chips; VW paint is a lot tougher then my Scoobies
) so I advertised it at £6500. A couple of months pass with only a couple of calls.
I then got talking to a bloke in a pub who worked as a trader. He'd seen my car and said it wouldn't sell unless I'm really lucky with a punter who doesn't know any better or I reduce the price ti what the markets demanded.
Drop the price, got about a dozen calls over a weekend and sold her for £5250
Scoobs are still selling, but people won't get the money they think it's worth with the current state of the market.
Stefan
I found the same a few years back trying to sell my VW Golf GTI. Pristine condition, 6 years old and only 35,000 miles. Parkers had it listed at £6995 for A1 condition. Mine was like new inside and out, with no pain work defects (other than a few stone chips; VW paint is a lot tougher then my Scoobies
) so I advertised it at £6500. A couple of months pass with only a couple of calls.I then got talking to a bloke in a pub who worked as a trader. He'd seen my car and said it wouldn't sell unless I'm really lucky with a punter who doesn't know any better or I reduce the price ti what the markets demanded.
Drop the price, got about a dozen calls over a weekend and sold her for £5250

Scoobs are still selling, but people won't get the money they think it's worth with the current state of the market.
Stefan
It was the one with the brake upgrade (courtesy of TSL). 
It must be that the drop in price had a big affect on the amount of interest in the car then. One guy actually asked me if I could 'magic-up a similar car'.

It must be that the drop in price had a big affect on the amount of interest in the car then. One guy actually asked me if I could 'magic-up a similar car'.
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