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Selling My 2010 and taking it in the shorts!

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Main Forum' started by azgringo, Apr 22, 2010.

  1. azgringo

    azgringo New Member

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    Yes, I do agree with your assessment. However, due to Toyota's "media problems", dealers have dropped their new-car prices by 10-12%, which forces me to do the same on my used Prii. So I'm effectively losing about $2 - $3k compared to what I could have got had it not been for Toyota's image problems. If this were NOT the case, I would be able to sell my Prii for what my payoff is. Instead, I'll be selling at a loss.
     
  2. hampdenwireless

    hampdenwireless Active Member

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    So you can make a lawyer richer, raise the price of future cars and maybe just maybe get a coupon for $200 off your next new Toyota.
     
  3. Rebound

    Rebound Senior Member

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    Toyota hasn't been in the news lately. The media has forgotten about it. Summertime and its higher gas prices are a month away. Prius prices will Rebound, at least a little.
     
  4. Aegison

    Aegison Member

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    Re: Loss on Resale Lawsuit

    A couple of posts have discussed whether a lawsuit would go anywhere if the cause of action was that Toyota's have dropped in value due to the recall mania.

    Ford faced, amongst all its other lawsuits over the Explorer, a lawsuit exactly like that. And, as one poster said above, the owners got next to nothing while the lawyers got rich.

    Here are a few comments drawn from a Bloomberg story at
    Ford Lawsuit Settlement Gives $500 Coupons to Explorer Owners - Bloomberg.com


    • Ford Motor Co. will give almost 1 million Explorer sport-utility vehicle customers $500 toward a new model or $300 toward other Ford vehicles to settle lawsuits claiming the SUVs lost resale value after a 2000 tire recall.
    • Customers in California, Illinois, Texas and Connecticut who bought or leased Explorers from 1990 to 2000 will be eligible to claim certificates toward the lease or purchase of new vehicles, said Kevin Roddy, an attorney for California customers who sued. Ford, the second-biggest U.S. automaker, confirmed the accord.
    • The accord, subject to court approval, could cost Ford as much as $500 million if all eligible customers received $500, Roddy said. The settlement resolves false-advertising lawsuits seeking reimbursements for customers claiming Explorers were worth less after the vehicles' tires were recalled.
    • The plaintiffs' attorneys will be paid $25 million in fees for work on the economic-damages suits, he said.
    'nuff said.
     
  5. cwerdna

    cwerdna Senior Member

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    HCH class action settlement

    On a related note regarding class action lawsuits, take a look at this gem of a settlement for HCH owners, that supposedly has been rejected.

    ConsumerMan: Prosecutors win, but not clients - ConsumerMan- msnbc.com
    Judge Questions Coupon Settlement in Honda Class Action - Law Blog - WSJ
     
  6. flbntz

    flbntz My First Toyota

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    I didn't trade my Prius because of the recall, I traded it because it was boring to drive. I liked it initially, and I still liked it when I traded it, but it wasn't fun to drive. I drove a VW Golf, and it has some of the same things I liked about my Mercedes. The suspension, and the engine, and the solid, well-built feeling it had. I traded the Mercedes because the warrantee ran out, and its transmission, and electrical systems were acting funny. I have nothing against the Prius, I like seeing them on the road, and miss certain things about mine, but the Golf is just so much more satisfying to drive, and with an ordinary in-line five cylinder, 170hp, 177lb-ft torque, it gets in the mid-to-upper thirties in the city, and on back roads, and I've already hit 42.6 with it on the highway, and it was still climbing when I got off at my exit. As to the suit, it's not because of the recall, but because Toyota hid the recall info from the government, and their customers, undermining people's confidence in them, and causing my Prius III, which I paid $24,340 for to drop in value to the point where I could only get $19,110 for it as a trade. Yes, I decided when to trade it, but, I feel that if Toyota had been more forthright with what they knew about the problems with their cars, I would have gotten a higher trade-in value for it. I was disappointed with Toyota, I'd heard good things about their cars, and had always wanted to try on. I felt the brake "problem" the first time it snowed, but I thought it was just the ABS pulsing. Once I got used to it, I thought that's just how that car operated, and I never felt unsafe in it; I'd just allow more distance to stop in snow. I did like the car, I just traded it because I found another car I liked better, but I feel I was harmed financially by Toyota's hiding things, and the psychological reaction it caused when people found out about it. I think it's a shame, but I think they need to be responsible for their behavior, and the effect it had on me, and other people.
     
  7. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    stupidity is not a right, it's a privelage.:rockon:
     
  8. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Added paragraph divisions so each assertion stands alone.

    I am not a lawyer and have no idea what the law says about selling personal property. I think some state consumer laws may apply but it is an area I have no experience. If it were a stock sale, the former stock holders might have a claim if it can be shown those who knew of the secret information used it for personal gain. However, this is not a stock, an investment, sale.

    There is a question of determination of the loss. It is my understanding that driving a new car off of a lot results in a $5,000 loss of value:
    The Cost Of Driving A Car Off The Dealer's Lot - Research and Read Books, Journals, Articles at Questia Online Library

    Drive a (Nearly) New Car for (Almost) Free!
    How Does a New Car Lose Value After Driving Off the Lot? | eHow.com
    So let's take the consensus value, 20% instant depreciation:
    $24,340 * 20% = $4,868
    $24,340 - $19,110 = $5,230
    $5,230 - 4,868 = $362 (* assumes no fees or taxes)

    $362 * (1/3) ~= $120 (* after attorney's fee)
    I'm no lawyer but this is my understanding.

    Bob Wilson
     
  9. drees

    drees Senior Member

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    Do you still not understand that $19k as a trade-in price is fair? And that comparing a brand-new car price to trade-in price is comparing apples to oranges?

    You should have sold the car private party - you'd get at least 2-3k more more selling it that way.
     
  10. Skoorbmax

    Skoorbmax Senior Member

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    Without knowing how many miles he had it seems ballpark reasonable.

    CARS are not gold coins. You will always lose money when you sell one you recently bought. This is why until now I've never bought a new car and I only leased this one because Toyota has ridiculous deals on them. As soon as you drive a car off the lot you've just lost thousands alone.
     
  11. ozarkgolfer

    ozarkgolfer Junior Member

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    Seems to me you should have looked at a Golf as well as the Prius and spent your money at the Volkswagen dealer in the first place.

    However, VW have been sending a lot of cars out the door with their own subsidized leases (the sign and drive deal) and in short order the value of your VW will be tied to those cars coming back off lease.

    Depreciation is always gonna kick your wallet. You made the mistake and don't want to accept the consequences. :confused:
     
  12. imolas54

    imolas54 Junior Member

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    With cars - when you are buying a car it always seems the cars are worth more money than you think. when you are selling it always seems like the cars are worth less money than you think.

    No way around it :(

    a golf? you got to be kidding right? that's a good car if you are 18 :D
     
  13. HTMLSpinnr

    HTMLSpinnr Super Moderator
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    Sounds like a case of buyer's remorse. In addition to depreciation, it needs to be understood that you chose to trade in the car rather than sell it private party. When you trade in, the buying dealer is expected to make a profit on the "wholesale resale" at auction, or the "retail resale" after minor reconditioning, advertising, building overhead, etc. The dealer (in Toyota's case) is also it's own separate company authorized to sell Toyota's products. When you traded your car in, you sold it back to whatever dealer you made the trade at, not Toyota Motor Sales. If you're not satisfied w/ the price, it should have been better negotiated at the time of the sale - after obtaining multiple bids or counter-bids.

    As for the class action - the car has only lost value if you're attempting to sell it. For me, the value of my car is irrelevant to me until such point where I'm paying registration/taxes, it's totaled in an accident or I decide to trade it in for the next best thing. At any other time, it's simply a pie-in-the-sky number.

    In the mean time, the true value of the car to me is that it gets me and my family from point A to point B safely and economically. All three iterations of Prius I own or have owned have done that well beyond my satisfaction.
     
  14. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    Suing for loss of value is idiocy. Imagine if Toyota had reported that it was suing all owners back in 2008, when values were higher than expected. It would be the same lopsided logic. Toyota has never represented to a customer what the car's value will be over time.

    We win some, we lose some. Lucky for us, there is a fair chance that the value will rebound, but Toyota has no responsibility towards the perverse stupidity of the American marketplace.
     
  15. danix

    danix Junior Member

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    Newbie here. I too am considering a used 2010 PriusII with under 3000 miles from a private owner. Given that I can buy a new one for right around $21k with free maintenance, what would be a fair price for this car? $20k?

    Resale is a real concern if you have to sell the car down the road for whatever reason. The glut of 2010s on the dealer lots tell me that $18-19k would perhaps be a more realistic price for this car.
     
  16. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    Danix, will you have to pay sales tax ?
     
  17. danix

    danix Junior Member

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    Yes, 9.25% "use tax". Used car transactions are taxed in CA. The more I think about this, the more of a bad idea I think it is.
     
  18. cwerdna

    cwerdna Senior Member

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    I'm very doubtful of your mileage, unless you're hypermiling.

    In Consumer Reports testing, they got 17 city/34 highway, 24 mpg overall and 30 mpg on a 150 mile trip on 2.5L 5 automatic.

    Per EPA tests at Side-by-Side Comparison, I see this:
    manual: 22/30, 25 mpg combined
    auto: 23/30, 26 mpg combined
     
  19. chrisj428

    chrisj428 Active Member

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    Second that. The VW I5 is notoroiusly uneconomical for an engine of it's output. The numbers you've quoted would make more sense with a TDI, but not the I5.
     
  20. yadax3

    yadax3 Member

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    The difference between the price I paid for my 2007 Prius and the price I sold it for this weekend is $7,000 or $184 for every month I owned it and drove it 52K miles. That's less than 14 cents per mile. Doesn't sound so bad to me.