Hello guys. Here are some pictures of the 1 of 4 blue Enzo worldwide seen last saturday night, the blue TDF Monaco Ferrari Enzo. Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
Joe, would there be a premium for a limited car like this in a rare colour rather than a traditional red?
And if so, what % out of interest? I can see a black Enzo attracting a premium as it has a wide appeal whereas TDF has a narrower one.
Yes, absolutely, rare liveries command a premium, especially if its a universally-loved color and not something weird. Any variant of dark blue, metallic or non-metallic, is impeccable taste. Exactly what premium, that's hard to say and you have to take it on a car-by-car basis. I know that if you or I owned a rare-liveried Enzo, we'd be asking more than the market price of a prolifically-produced red one. There is some value in a rare color, and I'd actually suggest that some might pa more for this color than for a black one.
it is interesting how 'difficult' it really is to have impeccable taste, just by choosing something that is proven to work on most cars that is not bright red. and if the resell value is higher for the non red car i am curious why most of the laferrari owners chose the red/black combo.
Safe assumption, everyone goes crazy every time something Pozzi/TdF shows. Maybe next decade we'll all go GREEN... **** yeah! Hopefully all this proves that people are finally moving on from red but it's going to be a long journey...
i think that british racing great will serve laferrari well, jay kay's would have been a bit better if it were without the black roof.
There is a mere 458 Italia (not an Enzo) wearing Blu Scozia that has been sitting on the Ferrari car lot for a very long time. It seems other colors have a greater attraction for buyers. Yellow is another fickle color that many talk up but seldom step up to buy.
Here are some additionnal pictures. Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login