Re: What Does The Future Hold For C1 and C2 Classics
I will take the contrarian view to many here. Whenever I drove my Sebring Silver '63 Sport Coupe, recently sold for a tidy profit - or even now with my Goldwood Yellow '65 Sport Coupe - a crowd gathers. These cars get serious attention even from children. What other car - EVER - could be bought off the showroom floor with side exhausts? They were objects of admiration when new and remain so today. The entire design, the look and the sound, are timeless.
At a car show just last Sunday, Jay Leno wandered over from his McLaren to chat with me and Don Hooper specifically about our Corvettes, and Jay has pretty good taste in cars :-)
That said, they were mass produced. Only a select few can be considered investment grade, and even then, over the long term one would likely be way better off investing in an index fund.
I will take the contrarian view to many here. Whenever I drove my Sebring Silver '63 Sport Coupe, recently sold for a tidy profit - or even now with my Goldwood Yellow '65 Sport Coupe - a crowd gathers. These cars get serious attention even from children. What other car - EVER - could be bought off the showroom floor with side exhausts? They were objects of admiration when new and remain so today. The entire design, the look and the sound, are timeless.
At a car show just last Sunday, Jay Leno wandered over from his McLaren to chat with me and Don Hooper specifically about our Corvettes, and Jay has pretty good taste in cars :-)
That said, they were mass produced. Only a select few can be considered investment grade, and even then, over the long term one would likely be way better off investing in an index fund.
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