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rubyn00bie | 1 month ago

I think for a new Ferrari there’s a fair chance it’s salaried individuals. There are quite a few folks who probably make enough to purchase a $400k-$800k car from their salaries. For ultra rare or special variants I think it’s unlikely as the percentage of someone’s net worth would likely be entirely consumed by the vehicle even at several million dollars a year. An example is an Enzo that sold this year for $17.6 million: https://www.thesupercarblog.com/ferrari-enzo-sells-for-a-rec...

FWIW—- that whole collection of cars, including the Enzo are 1 of 1 builds and it’s still shocking someone paid that much for a car with an absolutely heinous interior. I get it is unique, but it’s crazy someone paid that much for the privilege of owning the ugliest interior ever put in an Enzo. Reminds of the Ronald McDonald Viper from the mid 90s.

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rurban|1 month ago

90% of such supercar customers are criminals, either drug dealers or pimps. Dealership doesn't sell to them directly but third party. You see in the import logs that all of them are third party, from some Latin American sellers, none of them from Maranello. I dont understand why any rich folk wants to buy such a high-criminality symbol.

Eg the Germans meet up at the Cannes Film Festival every year. Almost all of them Hamburg pimps. With the occasional Hamburg Marketing pimp.

HPsquared|1 month ago

There's a certain swagger in saying "I don't care about resale value, I'm doing this for me"

fsckboy|1 month ago

did you ever read the story of the fox and the grapes?