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I'm lovin this top-of-the-line 2016 Lava Orange/Blk Leather 991 GTS manual sunroof coupe with 5k miles, lots of options, although the $119.9k asking price is not that cheap. MSRP was $135k. Not a CPO, and looks like no Bose.
I'm lovin this 2016 Lava Orange/Blk Leather 991 GTS manual sunroof coupe with 5k miles, lots of options, although the $119.9k asking price is not that cheap. MSRP was $135k. Not a CPO.
You must have missed the history here on this one. Agreed, nice ride though.
Sorry. I had a gap and did not notice it was the sane one mentioned here a few days ago. I can delete the post, but it is still on in Law's website and just came up on eBay again. Maybe the deal fell thru or Law is sloppy about taking it down.
Sorry. I had a gap and did not notice it was mentioned here. I will delete the post.
No problem! Good it's posted again. Surprised it didn't sell. Especially at the first dealer. It got scooped up quick by the current place and flipped for a higher asking $$.
Today I spoke to a manager of one of the dealerships and he told me that their pricing is provided by third party. Apparently they monitor the market and adjust the asking price accordingly. Then I noticed on the website "live market price". Anybody has an idea about this?
Today I spoke to a manager of one of the dealerships and he told me that their pricing is provided by third party. Apparently they monitor the market and adjust the asking price accordingly. Then I noticed on the website "live market price". Anybody has an idea about this?
Pretty common software subscription for most dealerships these days... Works great for Ford pickups and Honda accords. On late model 911's, far too much variability in options and condition for it to be very useful, but still probably better than other more static pricing guides for dealers setting prices on their inventory.
Today I spoke to a manager of one of the dealerships and he told me that their pricing is provided by third party. Apparently they monitor the market and adjust the asking price accordingly. Then I noticed on the website "live market price". Anybody has an idea about this?
Might be the case for a few clueless dealers. Anyone that knows the Porsche market and their local trade area well would never need something like this. As mentioned, maybe if you had 1,000 used cars on a lot. Geez, as shown here, it isn't brain surgery. If it's your career being in Porsche sales, you'd better know how to accurately price cars. If you don't, there's bigger issues there.