devmach-e
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- David
- Joined
- Sep 8, 2021
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 2,030
- Reaction score
- 2,488
- Location
- SF Bay Area
- Vehicles
- 2022 Premium RWD ER, 2016 Toyota Highlander Hybrid
- Occupation
- Unix Sysadmin
My house is worth considerably more than what we paid for it 24 years ago. But in 2008, its value dropped below what we owed on the house at the time. I didn't whine about it. I didn't demand that the sellers, or the bank, give me money back. I rode out the dip in the market and eventually things recovered and now it's worth a lot more.I do not trade cars every year or two or three. I have never bought a house at the top of a housing bubble. We own 100+ pieces of property and every one of them is worth considerably more than we paid for them dating back to 1967. Are we debating cars or real property? Apparently I've struck a nerve with several forum members. We keep most of our vehicles for 10 years +. That's not what this is about. The point is this is extraordinary depreciation. Is it Teslas fault, Fords fault, the market, a combination of all the above? I'm just saying it never hurts to ask. All they can say is no.
My point is that values can go up and down, in any market. Usually car values just go down, but it is the rate of depreciation that varies. The pandemic, with limited supply impacting both the new and used car market, severely skewed prices and expectations. We're just now getting back to something that resembles normal market forces.
The reason that your post seems to have struck a nerve is because you are coming across like an entitled Karen asking to see the manager. If you already were planning on keeping the car for 10+ years, then why does it matter to you that Ford cut the price of the car? It's not like you were planning on trading the car in this year or next year or even the year after that. The only reason why the more-than-normal depreciation on the car might matter to me is if I got in an accident and my insurance company had to total it, and the check they wrote me would be for less than what I had remaining on my loan. That's a worse case scenario, which could apply to any car I buy and finance.
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