Bill Harrahs plexinose Daytona that was on the cover of Road and Track sold for $1M +/- around 2015/16. Great Daytona to have, full nut and bolt resto done correctly. seller was disappointed. was expecting $1.8M.
This is important...implication is Chassis # has been Changed/fiddled with/Not Original number.?? MM was too a bit cryptic in his comment about this car. Please enlighten us, Thank You
I think the issue with Daytona's is as TTR says there are restorations and cosmetic detailing for want of a better word. If you look at Daytona's the relatively speaking high production run, the disadvantage of that is the best cars unfortunately get brought down by the many more average ones so while you can say $500k buys a good Daytona, I doubt it would buy an excellent one. In my opinion there is far too much of a price difference between a 275 and a Daytona.
Besides, IMO, only real and quantifiable references to values regarding ANYTHING, are those shared by individuals having just purchased or sold items in question. Everything else, including asking prices, auction reports, value guides or interweb forum peanut gallery opinions are suggestive and speculative at best and should be treated as such. I’m pretty sure (& know) there’s Daytonas (and lots of other cars) that aren’t or wouldn’t be available even at twice their currently perceived “market” values.
timo do you have any knowledge of recently sold daytonas? if so, condition and price please. what are the asking prices in your area? thanks
Sorry Ed, but with all due respect, I had hoped you’d know me enough that even if I possessed knowledge of any actual sales or transactions, I wouldn’t disclose/share their details with outsiders, let alone on public forum. As for the asking prices, since I'm not actively looking to buy one, I have no reason to pay attention to them.
IMHO this last sentence is not really telling - there are always people wanting to keep what they have, so they would not sell for whatever price; it has no impact on the real market which is between willing sellers and buyers.
I don't think so, the 275 is just an amazing car (IMHO better looking by far than the 250 GTO). However, I do agree the Daytona should be higher in comparison to the 2+2's, BB, and Dino's.
I would say that at $500k, a Daytona is roughly 2x or even a bit more the price of the comparable 2+2s. And the BB. That positions it about right on a relative basis. I don't know what Dino prices look like these days. A 275 should be about 3x a Daytona, and that's about where we are.
My 2 cents - A Daytona is the first Ferrari "supercar" and the only one in the Enzo era with a V12. For pricing relationships its hard to derive its price off of other Ferraris as it stands alone. I personalty would not compare pricing with a 2+2 of any kind. A 275 is the last of its kind and the Daytona is the first and only one of its kind, For how great a good one drives and the emotion and experience of winding one out I say priceless - My widow may not agree.
Aside from the basic difference in "age," one thing that distinguishes 275s from Daytonas is the fact that the Daytonas were much more "series production" in the modern sense. One can argue about what this means for charm (in favor of the 275s) or quality (probably in favor of the Daytonas), but one thing that is hard to deny is that the run of 275s is broken-up into a bunch of much smaller runs of variants, whereas aside from Spyders and Plexis, the Daytonas all get grouped into one larger pool of cars. I think this tends to make Daytonas more "interchangable," and this helps keep values lower. Though the fact that competition Daytonas go for less than competition 275s, and Daytona Spyders sell for less that 275GTB/4s (of which more were made) does strike me as hard to explain... Perhaps the association with the start of the Fiat Era?
+1 you made some very good points. IMO the 275 is the last classic Ferrari Berlinetta. The lineage of the iconic 250 GTO to 275 GTB is unmistakable. The Daytona is the last Enzo-era V12 Berlinetta.
I've been following this discussion with great interest. Where does this car fall in everyone's assessment of quality, condition, and value? https://www.hemmings.com/classifieds/dealer/ferrari/365gtb4/2297000.html Thanks VV
It's great https://rmsothebys.com/en/auctions/ca18/the-petersen-automotive-museum-auction/lots/r0062-1972-ferrari-365-gtb4-daytona-berlinetta-by-scaglietti/729896
Production numbers and rarity: I think 442 275s vs 1406 Daytonas. I've never heard the rule of thumb of a 275 GTB costing 3x the price of a Daytona, but it makes sense. At least for steel twin cam cars. Matt
the RM car doesnt show undercarriage and im not sure color is exactly as it was found. does anyone have a link to the barn find pix? i believe it was on wayne carinis chasing classic cars.
There were also, depending on which source you believe, 280, 330 or 350 275 GTB/4s made, 10 275 GTS/4 NART Spyders, and 200 of the entirely different shape, but the same underneath, 275 GTS.
There are comprehensive pictures here: https://lbilimited.com/offerings/1972-ferrari-365-gtb-4-daytona/ This looked to me to be nice car, though there are some oddities (like the painted brake booster), and the "shine" is coming off the undercarriage. One thing that I wonder about is how much was done in the restoration. There are some pics floating around of the car after it was first cleaned-up, and it basically looked pretty good. It would be a shame of a lot of its originality was "corrected"...
Here's #14999 again: https://www.barrett-jackson.com/Events/Event/Details/1972-FERRARI-365-GTB/4-DAYTONA-2-DOOR-COUPE-137816