bizzle
Veteran Member
That's his point. Even if the 13% is entirely attributable to dieselgate (and I'm of the opinion that it is *not*), that would still only account for a loss of $X - $2500 for most of the impacted cars.But the emissions problem caused the resale value. KBB is down 13% for VW Diesels since the scandal. VW as a whole is down 7% after the scandal. Now its not VW's fault that I no longer have a need for the car. But without the scandal I could have walked away without negative equity.
But it is what it is. I am putting storage insurance on the car tomorrow and will wait a few months to see if the dust settles.
Losing 20%-50% is either something going wonky with the purchase and initial loan or normal depreciation. The people posting that they bought their cars for $30K a year or two ago and can't trade it in for more than $17K or can't find buyers now are not accounting for normal depreciation or the fact that the market is soft for diesels and used cars at this time of year normally. The scandal did not drop $10K off the value of their cars like they seem to think.