Gooding Scottsdale 2015 - Italy ahead of Germany and USA
Summary
Two afternoons, 126 cars, a full tent of bidders, 25 new world records and USD 51.5 million in sales for the 114 vehicles sold - that's the balance sheet of the first Gooding auction in 2015. This report analyzes the results, shows the results in detail and some of the vehicles in the picture.
This article contains the following chapters
- Ferrari, ahead of Porsche, BMW, Mercedes and Shelby
- Cheap to have
- Surprisingly expensive
- Dino glut?
- Overall high prices
- Ten percent not sold
- Results of the Gooding auctions on January 16 and 17, 2015
Estimated reading time: 6min
Preview (beginning of the article)
Two afternoons, 126 cars, a full tent of bidders and USD 51.5 million in sales for the 114 vehicles sold - that's the result of the first Gooding auction in 2015. On average, the classic cars that were knocked down achieved exactly 100% of the estimated price, but this figure includes the surcharges/commissions. And the upward and downward swings were considerable. The 25 new world price records reported by Gooding were also impressive. On average, USD 451,900 (Euro/CHF 393,153) was recorded per car, including surcharges/commissions. An analysis of sales results shows that the ten most expensive cars include five Ferraris, two Porsches, one BMW, one Mercedes Benz and one Shelby.
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