YankeeVol
Raised a Yank, Born a Vol
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2010
- Messages
- 138,861
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I just spec'ed out a Chevy 2500 WT with the duramax $61,000 and change for a damn work truck. Absolutely insane, GMC was $64k.
I know you aren’t looking at these, but the 2023 GMC Canyon is going to START in the low $40k. Who the he** is going to buy a midsize truck that starts at that price tag? That’s lowers than starting price of the F-150, Silverado, and Ram 1500.
I believe you are right about that. I just can't fathom spending 80/90/100k on a pickup.
And I will bet that is for the 2022 model, as of yesterday they didn't have the "build it" available for the 2023s so I'm sure it will be over 100k for them.
I walked the lot while having some service done at dealership recently. Seems like the market adjustment was about 6.5% on everything I saw available. A few of those vehicles were things I would actually consider if I needed one. My prediction for the future is that the next time a manufacturer enters bankruptcy the franchise/network territory contracts will be voided. Eventually, all of the big three will go bankrupt again. When the manufacturers come out of bankruptcy they will all move to a direct-to-consumer model like Tesla. I imagine something similar will happen with the foreign makers only through a different legal mechanism.
You’re right. Although, I never thought I’d see Tennessee unwind the three tier tax system for alcohol manufacture, distribution and sales, yet it’s been happening bit by bit with a handful of new exceptions coming out of the legislature every year since they finally allowed wine in grocery stores about a decade ago. Same thing could easily happen with cars.I think in a lot of states the law mandates the manufacture has a dealer network and can't sell direct. It's be nice to spec out and order a truck online then have it shipped directly.
You’re right. Although, I never thought I’d see Tennessee unwind the three tier tax system for alcohol manufacture, distribution and sales, yet it’s been happening bit by bit with a handful of new exceptions coming out of the legislature every year since they finally allowed wine in grocery stores about a decade ago. Same thing could easily happen with cars.