LDHunter
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 30, 2021
- Threads
- 20
- Messages
- 211
- Reaction score
- 216
- Location
- NW Florida
- First Name
- Bob
- Vehicle(s)
- Rapid Red 2022 GT Premium California Special 10sp
- Thread starter
- #1
OK... I'll preface this by saying that I just sold my 2019 F150 Raptor back to the dealership that sold it to me new 2 years and a month ago with 26,400 miles on it for precisely what I paid for it less the sales tax which was minimal because I traded in a 4runner and a Jeep for it. So essentially I drove it almost for free all that time for less than a hundred dollars a month. I'm gonna label that free.
Here's my thought on my new 2020 Mustang Premium 401A package I just bought.
We all know that electric cars and trucks are the vehicles of the future and that future will arrive way sooner than we originally expected. I'm thinking that it won't be but a few years before gas powered sports muscle cars with great sounding exhaust will be harder and harder to find and production of new ones may even be outlawed. That may make our late model Mustangs instant classics because NOTHING sounds as good as the roar of a Mustang GT!
So... Back to the original topic of my message. Will we be able to sell late model Mustang GT's for as much as or possibly more than we paid for them in a few years? I think there's a distinct possibility. That doesn't mean that I bought my Mustang as an investment but I certainly am looking at that possibility favorably.
I know... This post may be looked at as blasphemy by many of us but it IS food for thought eh?
Here's my thought on my new 2020 Mustang Premium 401A package I just bought.
We all know that electric cars and trucks are the vehicles of the future and that future will arrive way sooner than we originally expected. I'm thinking that it won't be but a few years before gas powered sports muscle cars with great sounding exhaust will be harder and harder to find and production of new ones may even be outlawed. That may make our late model Mustangs instant classics because NOTHING sounds as good as the roar of a Mustang GT!

So... Back to the original topic of my message. Will we be able to sell late model Mustang GT's for as much as or possibly more than we paid for them in a few years? I think there's a distinct possibility. That doesn't mean that I bought my Mustang as an investment but I certainly am looking at that possibility favorably.
I know... This post may be looked at as blasphemy by many of us but it IS food for thought eh?
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