In Belgium MB has the star days. On a eqs 53 amg 25.000 off. 10-20 k on lower models.You sure? I a was offered this morning 5000gbp off a brand new EQS, plus extra 3000gbp off by the dealer and 0% interest rate.
They are desperate to sell them. I was in to get a quotation for a Marcopolo campervan ?.
I have to agree with these numbers. I've been looking to replace our ICE car with another ICE car and have been into a couple of BMW & Merc main dealers last week.....According to my dealer, 90% of all new Taycan buyers are companies, through lease or business PCP. If this is true of the entire UK dealer network, that means that 90% of the market cannot and will not consider a used Taycan. To that 90%, Taycan's are disposable. This means that dealers cannot sell used Taycans to the bulk of their customer base and this is what's fueling massive depreciation....
I don’t see a US dealer dropping the price of a new Taycan by 20%.If a 2024 Taycan has been sitting on the lot for 60+ days in the US, is it reasonable to approach the negotiation of the car thinking that the price can be reduced more now than in the past to effectively split the massive depreciation between the dealer’s cost and the buyer? It seems like if the dealer isn’t willing to move much, the market is unstable, and a purchase isn’t needed right now, it is much better to wait for better more predictable days as the OP suggests. Prices will most likely continue to go up with the refresh, but that almost seems like a better option if you are paying more, but have a more stable market that you are buying into.
With all that being saying, what is the best way to have a dealer see this logic and reach an agreeable price and does this look like 10% or 20% off from what folks have been able to achieve?
Strange. You would say there is always a price for which it can be sold. Probably it was so low he did not want to offend you.My Porsche dealer didn't even want to give ma a quote on my '22 Taycan CT4S, said they couldn't sell it, which made me hold off a purchase of the new (FL) Cayenne.
Only one reason an OEM dealer doesn’t even want to quote a trade-in - they don’t think they will make money on it. This usually is a combination of already having a large inventory, have a stop sale due to a recall with no end date, cars just not selling. If they have to sit in the car (which costs then money) while it depreciates (all cars do) they’d have to price in a huge upside for this kind of risk, or price it such that they know they can move it fast, but that would devalue their existing inventory. That and they know that giving a customer a super low value would likely only piss off the customer who wouldn't sell at such low price anyways but walk away offended.My Porsche dealer didn't even want to give ma a quote on my '22 Taycan CT4S, said they couldn't sell it, which made me hold off a purchase of the new (FL) Cayenne.