theswissguy_ch
New Member
Hello there,
We are considering to buy a motoryacht in the next 1-2 years. In fact, we may enter a kind of negotiation with a potential seller in the next 1-2 months already.
In preparation, I am trying to estimate what would be a "fair" selling price, assuming that the seller wants too much and me as buyer as low as possible.
I know the asking-price back then when he must have bought it (for sure at a lower price than the published asking price). I can roughly estimate the depreciation.
I am aware that the current owner did several upgrades lately (hard cockpit top, extended swimming platform, moved sat-domes to mast, ..), and of course he may claim these investments when we "negitiate" the price.
My question is: how much can such a seller claim as an increase of the selling price? So if the seller invested, say 200kEUR in the last 5 years, can he reasonably include these 200k in a 1:1 way to any other factors (buying price he had in 2015, depreciation over the time, ..). Ar are such investments only to be included in a reduced way, say, 70% of the investments done.
Any help is highly appreciated.
We are considering to buy a motoryacht in the next 1-2 years. In fact, we may enter a kind of negotiation with a potential seller in the next 1-2 months already.
In preparation, I am trying to estimate what would be a "fair" selling price, assuming that the seller wants too much and me as buyer as low as possible.
I know the asking-price back then when he must have bought it (for sure at a lower price than the published asking price). I can roughly estimate the depreciation.
I am aware that the current owner did several upgrades lately (hard cockpit top, extended swimming platform, moved sat-domes to mast, ..), and of course he may claim these investments when we "negitiate" the price.
My question is: how much can such a seller claim as an increase of the selling price? So if the seller invested, say 200kEUR in the last 5 years, can he reasonably include these 200k in a 1:1 way to any other factors (buying price he had in 2015, depreciation over the time, ..). Ar are such investments only to be included in a reduced way, say, 70% of the investments done.
Any help is highly appreciated.