Anyone at the sale who can give me a report on the 250 PF Coupe which sold a few minutes ago?? Condition & Final price??? Ken Goldman
0953GT hammered sold at €550,000 ($629,750) plus buyer's commission. Pics and info available here: http://www.rmauctions.com/lots/lot.cfm?lot_id=1071656 Image Unavailable, Please Login
seems like lots of cars are struggling to hammer at the low estimate, but most are still being let go.
Very good price for a restored car. Driver's Source has one available for $695K that needs a full resto...
Beautiful car. Is that nose badge really original? It's difficult to picture the factory using a badge that large (or even accommodating a customer request for it).
Reported prices on all sold Ferrari lots, including buyer's premium: Lot 112 1966 Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Series II s/n 9319 Sold for 246,400 Lot 116 1972 Ferrari Dino 246 GTS s/n 04714 Sold for 341,600 Lot 119 1972 Ferrari 365 GTC/4 s/n 15127 Sold for 224,000 Lot 120 1989 Ferrari Testarossa VIN ZFFAA17B000079401 Sold for 168,000 Lot 130 1958 Ferrari 250 GT PF Coupe s/n 0953GT Sold for 580,000 Lot 135 1963 Ferrari 250 GT/L s/n 5085GT Sold for 1,624,000 Lot 138 1963 Ferrari 250 GTE Series I s/n 2889GT Sold for 252,000 Lot 146 1990 Ferrari F40 VIN ZFFGJ348000087990 Sold for 1,176,000 Lot 149 1978 Ferrari 308 GTB Group B s/n 24783 Sold for 291,200 Lot 152 1969 Ferrari 365 GTB/4 s/n 12801 Sold for 705,600 Lot 154 1983 Ferrari 512 BBi VIN ZFFJA09B000044719 Sold for 263,200 Lot 167 1970 Ferrari Dino 246 GT 'L-Series' s/n 01040 Sold for 347,200 Lot 168 1957 Ferrari 250 GT Ellena s/n 0755GT (engine # 2963GT) Sold for 403,200
will be interesting to see if it was a end buyer who bought it or a dealer looking to flip it...my guess is the latter
I think the days of the dealer quick-flips are over, and that price is about market-correct at this point. And, that expensive car in Texas has been for sale for ages. Was a no-sale in Monterey in August, and still is listed as available. I think the price is a relic from a different phase of the market-- the "optimistic" phase. Michael
To be clear i wasn't trying to make a comment on price, really. It just seems to me that many cars bought at auction these days seem to be bought by dealers rather than end users...personally I don't see that as a good thing but if these dealers can find a buyer at a higher price point then so be it.
Wasn't there a 400 GT sold in the mid $8's last August at Pebble that Gary restored? This car also a fresh resto for over $300k less so how is this market correct?
I'm really sorry for being dense, but I've read your comment four times, and I just have to ask-- what are you talking about? I thought the substantive discussion above was about a Ferrari 250 PF Coupe (s/n 0953GT) and a Ferrari 250 Ellena (s/n 0755GT).
You're not being dense, I was! My bad, must of had a moment of confusion. Now back on track and yes the black PF sold for a good number... Geno