JumbleDuck
Well-Known Member
100k not a lot of money!!
Even those who do have £100k may not want to spend all of it on a boat.
100k not a lot of money!!
One of the drawbacks of living aboard away from home is that pressure is brought to bear not to do some of the smelly jobs, such as sanding off and varnishing. Maybe you have price figures for new boats Bav, Benny, etc. from 13 years ago. At that time, we paid £66,000 for the 376 and could have bought a new basic boat for a similar price. We've since spent approx £20,000 (new engine, windlass, radar, gantry, dinghy and outboard, solar, chart plotter, heater etc) but most of those costs would also have been add-on costs (except the engine) for a new boat. Our boat is worth (judging by recent sales) £45 - £50k but, how much would the new boat be worth now, had we bought one 13 years ago?
£100k is not a lot of money
My new Bavaria 37 cost just under £90k equipped to a very similar level to your boat in 2001. I spent virtually nothing on it, apart from new sails and a new saildrive plus normal maintenance and sold it in 2015 for £43k. So, just about evens.
And at that point I give up on this one. You're just being silly now.
I had the pleasure of a new boat! Hope for much the same, if not better for my new boat (assuming my reconditioned heart and new kidney last as well as the medics say they will).
Not difficult to see how relatively "ordinary" people with secure reasonably well paid jobs can build up that sort of net worth, even if it is not all in cash that can be spent on a boat.
It is true that owners of older boats have the discretion to not spend on keeping their boats up to scratch, hence all the clapped out unsaleable boats potential buyers here moan about. Graham is an example of somebody just starting that downward path for his boat. For many people the fixed, non discretionary annual expenditure is the biggest proportion of their total annual cost, and it is the same whether you have a new boat or an old one (although not the same for everybody), and particularly not the same in all parts of the country. However, the majority of boats are kept in the parts of the country where such costs are high, for all the reasons often debated here......
Opportunity cost is a tricky beast, which is why it is best left out of the equation. In strict monetary terms (the most common measure) it is currently close to zero on a risk free basis. In a more general sense that is, what alternatives are more valuable to you, it becomes more variable, personal and difficult to quantify. It also changes according to your circumstances. So, if the big C had not got me in 2009, I would still have a boat in the Med and would be spending 3 months of the year in New Zealand or travelling. Those options are no longer open to me, so I have a new boat which will hopefully give me 8-10 years of trouble free pleasure.
It is the enormous increase in personal wealth of a large section of the population in the last 30 years that has opened up all this choice and you can see it in so many ways - second homes, boats, collectors cars, travelling, continuous home extensions and updating, conspicuous consumable expenditure etc. This is not a time or place to discuss the rights or wrongs, nor whether it will continue - that is for the Lounge, but it is here, real and underpins the boating world.
As to the question of opportunity cost of a new one, I could not help but notice the number of posters who regard UK houses as equivalent to a high-yielding Gilt. Perhaps UK real estate is an upward only ratchet, perhaps it is a bubble, time will tell!
I don't think the generations which retire at 70 after a working lifetime of extortionate housing costs with less generous pensions than today's lot will have anything like as much money to fling around. For a start, the window between "retirement" and "care" is only going to get narrower.
A huge amount of the spending Tranona describes - boats, cars, holidays and so on - has been paid for by house price inflation. Or, more accurately, by younger generations paying through the nose to buy from older generations. It's hard to see how that can be sustained indefinitely. Anecdotally there may be a small surge in discretionary spending as young people give up all hope of buying and stop saving for deposits, but rents in some areas are already at spectacular levels, so both for the individuals and for the system as a whole it's probably a short term effect.
I don't think the generations which retire at 70 after a working lifetime of extortionate housing costs with less generous pensions than today's lot will have anything like as much money to fling around. For a start, the window between "retirement" and "care" is only going to get narrower.
We have a poster above who couldn't afford a house in his 20s but spent the £11,500 which could have been a deposit on one], on a boat?
Many of current generation's pensions aren't too good either, our funds never recovered after the crash in late '90s. Those of us with boats however old and tatty need to remember there are tens of thousands out there who don't have the money to buy even a dinghy.
I get a bit fed up with hearing how our generation have dropped the younger ones in the sh1t but I see a vast difference in priorities. I started off work as an apprentice motor mechanic, earning very little in the 60s. My generation (in general terms) were more frugal, scrimping and saving to get into the housing market, then spent money later in life. Now it seems, £500+ phones, expensive cars (often lease hire these days) and holidays, lots of eating out and weekends awy etc are a higher priority with many, who moan they can't afford a house. We have a poster above who couldn't afford a house in his 20s but spent the £11,500 which could have been a deposit on one, on a boat?
Is your 376 really worth £45-50? . Last year I spoke to someone just buying one from Hamble point and he paid £23k, all the systems worked and was about to motor it round to Poole to use as cheap weekday accommodation whilst he worked Monday to Friday in the marine trade there. Of course it had been for sale for well over a year. Unfortunately there is very little demand for "old" boats that don't look like the modern ones shown at the boat shows.