5 Big Losses From the Latest Hagerty Price Guide

1996 Ford Bronco Eddie Bauer Ford

If you’ve been paying attention to the collector car market the past few months, it’s clear that the pandemic boom is over. While blue chip grade prices appeared particularly shaky at the Monterey auctions back in August, there is much more to it. Indeed, there have been drops everywhere from Maseratis to Muscle Cars, from SUVs to Siatas. While there is a lot we could cover, here are a few meaningful drops in our most recent update to the Hagerty Price Guide, which went live at the beginning of the month.

Curious how we come up with our values? You can read more about the methodology behind the Hagerty Price Guide here.

1964–70 Maserati Mistral

1967 Maserati Mistral
Rob Sass

Average decrease: -18%

Previously a racing powerhouse, Maserati began a pivot to grand touring cars in the late 1950s. A successor to the 3500 GT, the Mistral is the first Maserati in a long line of cars named after a wind. Mistral is the cold northerly wind that blows from France into the Mediterranean. This car also holds the distinction of being the final Maserati to use the company’s venerable twin-spark, inline-six engine, derived from the very successful Maserati Grand Prix cars of the 1950s. Topping everything off is a very handsome two-seater body designed by Frua.

Maserati continues to be a finicky market. While arguably just as important as Ferrari or Lamborghini, the brand doesn’t have the same name recognition or staying power. Recent sales results suggest a down market for these cars, and expert sentiment is down. Like other high-end vehicles of this era, the overwhelming demographic collecting these cars, as indicated by insurance quotes, is of the Baby Boomer variety. Meanwhile, fewer younger enthusiasts are longing for a 1960s Maserati. It’s not all bad news for Mistrals, though, as better accessibility can be a boost to interest. We will see in time.

1958–60 Ferrari 250 GT Coupe

Ferrari

Average decrease: -15%

For classic Ferrari fans, this is an important car. The 250 GT Pinin Farina (PF) Coupe is a must-have for any sizable classic Ferrari collection, and the 250 series as a whole is without doubt the most recognizable of the classic Ferrari road cars. That basic shape defined an era for the brand and the 250 Colombo engine powered some of the most important cars of all time, like the 250 GTO and 250 SWB. To own a 250 GT PF Coupe is to share DNA with these legends.

Looks, heritage and a less insane cost (relative to their crazy-valuable cousins, at least) have kept the 250 GT PF Coupe’s values steady over the years as the cars around them have seen more pronounced fluctuations. That said, there are a number of factors going on here which contributed to the drop. First being a poor showing of 1950s-60s Ferraris as a whole at the Monterey auctions over the summer. While Monterey is a small snippet of the market generally, it is always a watershed event for the Ferrari market. The poor showing there and low expert sentiment about the wider market were huge contributors. Less obvious is an undeniable market shift happening at all levels. As Gen X have taken over as the dominant collecting demographic, they are buying cars they relate to more. Why buy a 250 GT when a Testarossa or F40 is the Ferrari they grew up dreaming about? The 250, meanwhile, is overwhelmingly a car collected by the old guard, which does present headwinds for the future.

Doom and gloom aside, this car remains a work of art that still is a must-have car if you have the means to collect Ferraris. However, it may have forever shifted from a logical entry point to serious Ferrari collecting to a car you simply buy to round out the collection.

2003–10 Bentley Continental GT

2003 Bentley Continental GT
Bentley

Average decrease: -11%

Unless you’re a hardcore Bentley fan, it may be hard to grasp the importance or the lure of the Continental GT. When Bentley burst on the scene with a flagship car pumping out 552 horsepower from a twin-turbo W-12 engine in an era when 400 horsepower was still something of a novelty, you couldn’t help but pay attention. There was also the fact that, prior to the 2000s, much of Bentley’s sporting identity dated from way back before World War II. So, a coupe with monster power from a company that mostly built country club cruisers was a big surprise.

What is equally eyebrow-raising is the Continental GT’s resilience to the usual freefall of depreciation luxury cars, especially Rolls-Royces and Bentleys, are prone to. The Continental GT wasn’t immune, but it handled the blow far better than it could have, as their values quickly settled and held firm. Now, though, we’re seeing additional drops.

For many enthusiasts, cheaper sales figures and lower listings are a good thing. Believe it or not, you can pick up an excellent condition, early production Continental GT coupe for under $40,000, later production cars with all the refinements for a tad over $50,000. Think about it, that’s some major horsepower for your dollar, plus a top-shelf badge. Of course all the usual luxury car caveats apply of buying the best car you can afford and with a documented service history. Supersports and Speed models with their higher collectablity and power are out of reach for many, but are still under the six-figure mark on average. So if you’re wanting a big, comfortable car with pin-you-to-the-seat power, then the Continental GT may be the best aristocratic bang for our peasant buck on the market right now.

1992–96 Ford Bronco

1995 Ford Bronco XLT Front Three-Quarter
Mecum

Average decrease: -11%

Ford Broncos have been on the rise for so long, it seems truly strange to hear about any of them going down in value. Surprisingly, this one did.

When thinking about the 5th generation (1992-96) Bronco, you have to take a step back and appreciate how far the line had come over the years. Ford did a great job of smoothing the rough edges and when you open the doors, a well-appointed interior is there to greet you. Auto manufacturers were beginning to recognize that buyers wanted less utility and more comfort in their trucks. For a 30-plus-year-old collector vehicle, it’s hard to argue with the 5th gen Bronco being the best one to live with.

Despite the 5th gen’s draw, it seems buyers are beginning to be a bit pickier with the trucks they shell out big money for. Examples needing attention are being passed on by buyers, while sellers are needing to accept lower prices, while the drop for top-condition examples is less severely felt. Beyond the fact that pickier buyers are driving lesser vehicles down in value, there are only clues to why 5th gen Broncos changed in value while others were more stable. Perhaps they’re shaking loose the perception that 1990s trucks are used trucks, maybe fear of restoring an old truck with computers. Whatever the reason, the 5th generation Bronco is a solid choice that just got more attractive in price.

1980–91 Volkswagen Vanagon

VW | Vanagons.org

Average decrease: -10%

In the United States, the Volkswagen van has long been a symbol of freedom and the open road. While this sentiment applies most profoundly to the first and second generation VW Transporters, the later Vanagon still beckons the same way its older siblings did. Basic, practical and endlessly configurable, the Vanagon has the same DNA within it. However as time progressed, the Vanagon would go through massive changes. Starting with air-cooled and and carbureted engines, they changed to water cooling in 1983 and would eventually offer a diesel option and even all-wheel drive.

Vanagons have experienced growth over the years, however not at the explosive rate of the earlier split and bay window vans. The market right now is saturated with driver-quality examples or worse, which historically has a negative effect on the market. All that aside, even if the barrier to entry is falling, the cool factor of a classic VW van is priceless.

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Comments

    Have you been watching Barrett-Jackson lately. Bronco’s and Silverados are selling for big money ! The older ones are going for 6 figures !

    Older Ferrari and Maserati are lovely cars, but as memory fades of their glory days as race cars, regrettably their appeal to the newer generation fades too. One hopes that anyone buying these cars enjoys them on the open road as they were intended to be driven, rather than parking them in climate controlled warehouses as trophies.

    I’m not a collector, but it is very interesting to look at the trends in the market. And you have to remember, there’s no accounting for taste.
    To a VW collector, I committed blasphemy years ago, I built a Manx-type buggy, and am putting it back together for the 5th time ! It was first built in 1968, the body was my High School graduation present, and I started with a ’57 sunroof.
    BUT……….I’ve had fun with the car & isn’t that the REAL reason of the hobby ?

    Why do people seem to not understand that there’s more cars than Mustangs, Camaro’s or Corvettes? If that’s all that Hagerty covered I wouldn’t even bother looking at this articles. Variety is the spice of life, no?

    Said it before, will say it again, I do not really care much for having a collector car as an investment. I buy the cars that I love to drive (and look at) and I will let my heirs sell them. They will be happy to have the money no matter how much they are worth at that time.

    A good sign. The tulipmania bubble of the pandemic years hurt the hobby. Older people with long-standing investments in legacy cars did very well, but that’s NOT a good thing — all of those people with a grain of sense rode the longest-ever property boom up and up from the 1970s or 1980s and are already rich (on paper, at least) from unearned and largely untaxed windfall equity. That same equity allowed them to buy more and better cars and drive car prices through the roof during the pandemic — a double whammy for anyone not lucky enough to have been born before, say, 1965. As for me (a 1962 baby), the crazy prices of the last few years pushed me into what the Germans (and now many of us) call ‘youngtimers’: more recent cars at the bottom of their depreciation curve. I am having a ball driving my 2006 mini Cooper S, which is like a supercharged gokart — with six airbags, ABS, traction control, and all mod cons. I’ll never buy a pre-2000s car again.

    People mentioning they can’t afford these cars, may I point you to classic JAGUARS? The sporty xk8 convertible (or coupe, less made), xj6 & the xj8 ‘pre-facelift’ (before 2009 with a LEAPER & the iconic grille). The xk8 &xj8 post 2003 – 2008, feature an awesome 4.2l v8, 300 hp. help these cars FLY! The xj6 have the iconic ‘inline 6’ cylinder good years 1985-‘87 & 1995-97. The xj6 have that ‘miniilistic interior approach’. While the v8 in xk8/xj8 gets better gas mileage than the six, xk8 (best years 2004-2008, 2006 began aluminum bodies), xj8 2004 & up had aluminum bodies (2004 – 2008). Xj6 can harbor RUST.
    You can find these cars from @$7,000 up to $32,000+. BUT, I’ve seen many good models with 70k mi. @ $2,998 to $14,000 (30k miles). Jaguars are infamous for their ‘technical gremlins’. But, take your time, find one with service records & in your price range. Overall, I’ve been lucky w/ 3 Jaguars, one each of the above mentioned.
    For me, once I had, drove a Jaguar, it’s my main car of focus. The models & years mentioned above are good years, less problems than other years, models. jaguars tend to have common problems, weak areas… headliners ALWAYS fail, coolant reservoir tanks need replaced, air suspensions are awesome but only last @ 50k mi. (replace all 4 ‘shocks’ cost @ $7,000.). (Beware of online auctions! Many sites are out to push sales, selling on hyperbolic statements in their ads. Most don’t back a thing, their ToS nothing but words. Like they don’t know the meaning of the words they use.)
    (Hagerty’s always been fair with me over 24 yrs., but I’ve never had a claim either.)

    I don’t have much faith when a lot of this is based on auctions. Ninety percent of these people are speculators, just another form of manipulation much like the stock markets. If you’re really interested/ wanting something you want to be able to look it over good yourself, drive it, be very knowledgeable about what you want and are looking at and probably look at more than one. Plus you have done your research and know what you’re willing to spend

    My brother bought a 2007 GT Bentley from a friend for $40k. Gorgeous white car. Low mileage , but not regularly maintained . He bought it cheap , when the book values were almost $70-75k. He took it to the Bentley dealer for a service update and the oil change and other stuff cost him $5k ! Then he damaged a custom wheel. Another $1500. He unloaded it for $40k. Thought he could make a 20k profit.
    Lesson learned. Stay away from these foreign exotics.

    I’d LOVE a Bentley but our garage in this Del Web community is FAR to small !! A 2024 RAV3 Limited with sales tax and plates is a little over 46K. Just bought one for my wife. It “fits” in the crappy garage. If I’d have known the garages were so CHEEP I’d have never moved here. It’s a Pulti home. Can’t tell you anymore or I’d get sued.

    The Bentley, excepting Speed and Supersports variants, is just another used car. Many were driven by wives or mistresses, and not maintained as they should have been. Probably on 3rd or 4th owners by this point. Well built/robust (meaning they will take a beating) but not reliable nor inexpensive to service. Pass.

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