It is all a matter of perspective. Kila mtu who buys their first vehicle anaambiwa Nissan haina resale value. Not that Nissans are all bad but they carry a reputation that has been transfered from generation to generation.Resale Value isn the biggest con ever ran on Kenyans who want to buy cars... How do you buy a vehicle and expect it not to depreciate. Hata Kenyans ni wajinga pia.
So depreciation and natural attrition has nothing to do with car value? How then do you determine resale value?It is all a matter of perspective. Kila mtu who buys their first vehicle anaambiwa Nissan haina resale value. Not that Nissans are all bad but they carry a reputation that has been transfered from generation to generation.
Toyotas on the other hand, zinapendwa sana especially axio, fielder, allion na premio. Ongeza hapo succeed pia. They will always maintain their value because they are reliable vehicles and the parts are available and relatively inexpensive.
It does but if you were given a 10 year old locally used Nissan or Toyota which one would you choose. I can tell you one of our oldest vehicles, a touring, that is currently being used for farm activities is going for 300k 24+ years later.So depreciation and natural attrition has nothing to do with car value? How then do you determine resale value?
Nissan was going broke in the late 90s and had to cut costs. Core components such Transmissions were garbage, Jatco CVTs are rubbish, also why supercharge a 1ltr engine ? Such reputations are difficult to shed.It is all a matter of perspective. Kila mtu who buys their first vehicle anaambiwa Nissan haina resale value. Not that Nissans are all bad but they carry a reputation that has been transfered from generation to generation.
Toyotas on the other hand, zinapendwa sana especially axio, fielder, allion na premio. Ongeza hapo succeed pia. They will always maintain their value because they are reliable vehicles and the parts are available and relatively inexpensive.