This gives me a woodie! (Shelby 1000 hauling ass)

General Intelligent Discussion & One Thread About That Buttknuckle

Moderator: Andrew

Postby slucero » Tue Mar 12, 2013 5:23 am

"nominal value" and "perceived value" are two completely different things, yet most people think they are the same.


Two examples of nominal value:
  • The 1970 Hemi Cuda - $6271 ($5400 base + $871 Hemi option)
  • The 2013 Shelby Cobra - $204,200 (54,200 base + $150,000 Shelby mods))


Examples of perceived value:
  • This Nash Bridges Cuda - $150K (nominal value) because of its association with the TV series.. that's the "perceived value", and only if one agrees that the association with the TV makes the car 10 times the value.
  • Cuda World ( www.Cudaworld.com ) - you'll find them from $25K and up...
  • A numbers matching, 1st off the assembly line 1970 Hemi Cuda for $3.2 Million.. http://www.motorauthority.com/news/1062 ... le-3200000



The point I was trying to make is this.. and it is a bit abstract.... using the 2013 nominal value (price) Steve provided of a $204,200, had the Shelby been sitting right next to the $6271 Cuda in 1970.. the Shelby would have had a nominal value (price) of $35011.99. That nominal difference only comes from the change in the "perceived value " of money, not the cars... because the real value of the dollar has diminished from 1970 to 2013. It's why the Shelby would be priced so much higher sitting right next to the Cuda in 1970.

Let's remove the nominal valuation (dollar price) from the discussion and look at only perceived value.

Assume both cars are numbers matching, fresh off the assembly line. Would you trade the 1970 Hemi Cuda for a 2013 Shelby? Or a 2013 Shelby for a 1970 Hemi Cuda?

Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.


~Albert Einstein
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Postby KenTheDude » Thu Mar 14, 2013 12:02 am

I had to take the Lotus in for service this past weekend. The dealership also sells Aston Martins. You drop off the keys to your car at the counter inside the Aston Martin showroom. They have an Aston Martin V12 Vantage Carbon Black edition in there that's $223,000. There were only 40 carbon black (a matte black color like a fighter jet) editions built with 20 coming to the U.S. This dealership happened to get VIN # 007. I'm not big on flat black paint and especially cars with black rims, but this car looked bad-ass in real life. Here's a quick video clip of it the salesman told me was on YouTube....


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHhXL-bxrhw
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