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Deleted User YDKXO
Guest
I guess some of you might have read the report in this month's MBY on the refit of a 15yr old Tecnomar 82. For anyone who didn't, it was about a guy who bought a 15yr old Tecnomar 82 in Italy for a knockdown price, brought it back to the UK and had it refitted at a total cost of £1.5m including the cost of the boat itself and the transport back to the UK
I must admit that when reading about major refits, I tend to always think what a great thing to do but the owner will never get any of his money back when he sells it but then I started to think a bit more about it. Say this guy had spent that £1.5m on a 5yr old 82 footer. When he came to resell it in 5-7yrs time, the current market would result in him losing say £0.5m in depreciation, maybe more. So maybe it does make sense to buy that 15yr old 82 footer for say £400k and providing you spend less than £0.5m on a refit, you've saved money plus you get a boat that is exactly as you like it. The owner of the Tecnomar in the MBY article spent a lot more than £0.5m but most of that seemed to have been on a highly dubious marmite '70s interior which seemed purpose designed to make it hard to resell the boat
Then I got to thinking that if you decided to buy a boat and refit it, which refit jobs would add to the value of the boat and which wouldn't? I'm guessing that spending a few bob on upgrading the nav gear to state of the art equipment would definitely add to the value of the boat and I assume that replacing/reconditioning the engines and genny would do too. But would refurbing the interior and fitting new teak decks increase the value of the boat or just make it easier to resell (providing you don't choose a '70s interior design!)?
Any thoughts?
I must admit that when reading about major refits, I tend to always think what a great thing to do but the owner will never get any of his money back when he sells it but then I started to think a bit more about it. Say this guy had spent that £1.5m on a 5yr old 82 footer. When he came to resell it in 5-7yrs time, the current market would result in him losing say £0.5m in depreciation, maybe more. So maybe it does make sense to buy that 15yr old 82 footer for say £400k and providing you spend less than £0.5m on a refit, you've saved money plus you get a boat that is exactly as you like it. The owner of the Tecnomar in the MBY article spent a lot more than £0.5m but most of that seemed to have been on a highly dubious marmite '70s interior which seemed purpose designed to make it hard to resell the boat
Then I got to thinking that if you decided to buy a boat and refit it, which refit jobs would add to the value of the boat and which wouldn't? I'm guessing that spending a few bob on upgrading the nav gear to state of the art equipment would definitely add to the value of the boat and I assume that replacing/reconditioning the engines and genny would do too. But would refurbing the interior and fitting new teak decks increase the value of the boat or just make it easier to resell (providing you don't choose a '70s interior design!)?
Any thoughts?