The problem of putting money in an old car as an investment is the chance of unforeseen problems i.e. crashes, theift, etc.- which is also the case of the stock market. Remeber, the insurance companies almost never pay back what you'd have put into it. Also- look at how much $$ can go into a project. My dad's R/T Charger was restored from the frame up. Every part with any level of rust or problems was replaced by real new-old stock Mopar parts when possible, or from a yard as a last result. The job, if done completely by shops (my dad did a lot of it) would have been around $80k. Car sold for under $50k You almost never get back what you put into it. Look at the costs of keeping up a car (normal ware and tare stuff like filters and such). Now add stuff that brakes with use, stuff replaced during a rusteration job body work (often the biggest $$ part- say you strip the car at a factory with a drop-tank, have every single dent and sctrach repaired, a professional primer and paint job with the car completely dis-assembled, rechrome of chrome parts, replacement of glass with imperfects or discoloration, etc.), Any customized stuff Plus the $$ for all your hard work. Say you're work is only worth $5 an hour. At $5 an hour- for going to yards to locate and pull parts, locating yards in phone books, driving around for parts, installing and removing stuff on the car, anything you do with/to the car, plus the time involved with designing any modifications, etc. All that added up gets big- real big. I've seen people pump over 100k into a car project. Now if a fire came and took out a storage garage in a winter, or a theift striped the car, or a crash occurs, even with insurance (which will not pay for everything you put into it- reminds me- an other cost- insurance its self- big $$ if you never need it...) you are down a lot. Now with the stock market, lose it and then you get big tax credits (often). Car prices will vary a little, but go up about the price of inflation these days (unless owning a certain model or era car becomes a new fad....). Its a gamble like anything else in this area. 'course, that's just my 2�.... --- Mark McDonald <tomswift@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I'm not sure where this would be most appropriate, > so I'm sending it to > both. > > A friend of mine and I were talking about the > economy going South > recently, and how much money we've lost in the stock > market, and he made > the comment that he should have put his money in > Imperials instead. > > I was just wondering: what do people feel about the > old car hobby as an > investment? I have always heard it's not a wise > place to put your money > (old cars); that the only real reason to do it is > because you enjoy it, > but not to expect a big financially gain. > > On the other hand, once these cars start going up, > they're only going to > continue going up. An old Imperial's value can only > increase . . . > assuming, of course, you keep it up. > > Anybody have any thoughts on this? (It would > probably be better to > respond in the Salon, I guess.) > > Mark > > >