Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never. And the attorneys general of the various jurisdictions should investigate this as an unfair trade practice.
Why, it’s supply and demand.
Selling above advertised price is classic bait and switch
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These prices are here to stay for 2 to 3 more years. The micro chips shortage and shipping problems are real.
Bingo. It’s going to ease slightly but that will take awhile. And manufacturers will be raising MSRPs significantly as their materials and labor costs have gone up. Tesla is already doing this—they’ve hiked the sticker price of several models by $6 to $10k+ this year. We’ll never see prices as low as they were in 2019, and the days of heavy discounting are over (never again will you get $10k off an F150).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never. And the attorneys general of the various jurisdictions should investigate this as an unfair trade practice.
Why, it’s supply and demand.
Anonymous wrote:These prices are here to stay for 2 to 3 more years. The micro chips shortage and shipping problems are real.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t think I can post a photo here but there is one floating on the Internet. A RAV4 hybrid in CA with $40,000 dealer mark-up. Nuts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This market is nuts. I just (2 months ago) bought a 2019 used from a dealer. Today I was bored and turns out I can sell it to carvana for $3k more? Are people having side hustles buying and selling cars?
Maybe but the market will drop out with no warning and the 10 cars you own in inventory will all of a sudden be worth half.
Anonymous wrote:In other parts of the country, there are no cars to be found. I live in Tennessee and wanted a RAV4 Hybrid and there were literally zero when I was looking in August and September. Knoxville, Nashville, Atlanta, none.
I ended up going to the DMV to buy my car and I paid MSRP. I'm just thankful I didn't have to pay over.