- Words by Tess Van Straaten Photography by Lia Crowe
Internationally renowned car guru Tim Quocksister will never forget the first car he ever sold. It was a 1997 Porsche Boxster and it was 20 years agoѻýjust two weeks after launching .
ѻýWeѻýve maintained relationships for years with customers, and a lot of customers who bought a car off of us 20 years ago still are doing it today,ѻý the 42-year-old says, ѻýI can think of multiple people who have bought 10 or 15 cars off of us over the years and I certainly appreciate their loyalty.ѻý
The Victoria-based company saw its highest-priced car sale this springѻýa whopping $7.9 million USD for a rare 1955 Mercedes-Benz 300SL Alloy Gullwing.
ѻýThere were only 29 of them made and that was the third one that we have sold,ѻý explains Tim, whoѻýs also sold 48 of the coupe and roadster variants of the 300SL.
ѻýRight now, we have four in stock and weѻýve probably transacted the most of anyone else in the world that isnѻýt a restoration shop. We love the carsѻýtheyѻýre probably one of the most recognized cars in the world with the doors that go up. Theyѻýre iconic and they were just so ahead of their time in terms of technology and performance.ѻý
Several of those sales have been in the last year, during the COVID-19 pandemic. And given that the non-alloy versions fetch more than $1 million USD, itѻýs a pretty strong indication of the health of the collector car market.
ѻýBusiness is exceptional and weѻýve sold about 120 cars on Bring a Trailer [a digital auction platform], which is now one of the biggest auction sites in the world. Over the last year theyѻýve set all-time records for car prices and weѻýve sold three of the highest-priced cars that theyѻýve ever sold.ѻý
Itѻýs not at all what Tim and his team expected when the COVID-19 pandemic first hit in March of 2020, shuttering businesses and rocking economies across North America and the world.
ѻýWe obviously got a big scare and thought thereѻýs a good chance business is going to be non-existent. We made an effort to get rid of as much inventory as we could as fast as we could,ѻý he says. ѻýAs it turned out, March wasnѻýt as slow as we thought it would be, April was busier, May, June, July and August were good and itѻýs been up, up, up every single month. What we did learn from it is that the vast majority of people have more time on their hands than theyѻýve ever had to sit and look at the internet and buy things theyѻýve always wanted.ѻý
Itѻýs a far different outcome then the last time the world changed overnight. Silver Arrow was incorporated in May of 2001ѻýless than four months before the September 11 terrorist attacks in the US.
ѻýMy biggest learning lesson was it doesnѻýt matter how much you know, your world can change very quickly,ѻý Tim explains. ѻýAt that time, I was buying cars in Canada and selling them in the United States and every US dollar was worth around $1.55 to $1.60 Canadian. And then the borders closed. I learned very quickly you canѻýt count on the cross-border exchange being there. We had a good wake-up call right away.ѻý
Silver Arrow rode out those challenging times and business has been booming ever since. In addition to David Street location in Victoria, the company has a warehouse in Blaine, Washington that it ships vehicles from, and a facility in Scottsdale, Arizona [home of the famous Barrett-Jackson collector car auctions] thatѻýs used as its US-operations base.
ѻýI would say about 70 per cent of our business is outside of Victoria and of that, 70 to 80 per cent is out of Canada,ѻý Tim says. ѻýI think for business this next year, weѻýre going to make a deeper impact in the US market and build our local consignment business up more and more.ѻý
Silver Arrow ships cars all over the world and Tim has helped buyers build $100 million-plus collections. Right now, he says the market is trending towards a much more modern era of collector vehicles.
ѻýThere are a lot of the cars from the ѻý80s and ѻý90s that have had huge leaps in value the last few years, and a lot of your old-timers that were collectors of the ѻý30s, ѻý40s and ѻý50s cars are becoming a little obsolete,ѻý he says. ѻýWeѻýre finding that the 40-year-old collector isnѻýt looking for that. Theyѻýre looking for a car from the ѻý70s, ѻý80s or ѻý90sѻýcars like Acura NSXs that came up in 1991, the Ferrari Testarossa or Lamborghini Countach. Those were very special in their time and are gaining a great deal of interest from younger collectors.ѻý
As the company celebrates its 20th anniversary, Tim says the key to success is adjusting to forks in the road while keeping to your core principles.
ѻýYou certainly have challenges along the way, but you need to stick to your fundamentals,ѻý he advises. ѻýSay what you mean, mean what you say, and do what you say youѻýre going to do.ѻý
Story courtesy of , a Black Press Media publication
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