Showing posts with label mercedes brunei. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mercedes brunei. Show all posts

Friday, 25 April 2014

Brunei Darussalam Used Cars Market

This information  was especially created to help you buy and sale quality used cars in Brunei at the comfort of your house or office without the hassle of having to search at each car yard.



Brunei’s used car market

Brunei’s used car market picture by Brunei Times

A MICROCOSM, that’s what I’d call the used car market here in Brunei. It doesn’t really seem to make sense for some of the people who are looking in and seeing the prices of certain vehicles stay where they are, other car models depreciate in a manner that will either make you laugh or cry.
It all relates to demand and supply, as with other things that find themselves for sale in a market. At least it’s based on some vague principals of demand and supply.
As with the usual case if there is a limited supply of a particular car, and lots of people are willing to pay good money for it, then the prices would tend to rise… or at least I thought that to be the case.
Interested buyers
Here in Brunei it seems that buyers are more interested in just waiting for prices to drop and drop. They probably know that if they are in the market for a particular car, one will come up some time, in most cases later rather than sooner... but if they’re willing to wait, they’re very likely to get the bargain price that they’re looking for.
Why is that the case? Well, in the years that I’ve been ogling at cars that have now gone from being contemporary to classics (I’m not so old that cars I fancy have become vintage unless they were vintage to begin with) the only time I’ve seen their prices actually go up is when I’m surveying prices for the same market abroad and outside of Brunei.
Cars here only seem to do one thing, drop in price, and if they don’t it’s only because the people who have the cars to begin with aren’t selling. The term “sellers’ market” comes to mind, but like I mentioned earlier, it’s just a case then of the buyers waiting and waiting, until the seller’s resolve has finally broken.
Older cars and used cars
Demand for certain older or rare cars seems to exist among the people that actually know or place value in the car they’re looking to buy.
Let’s give an example. An old Mercedes E-Class W124 was being sold for several thousand dollars as advertised in the news paper the other day. If you go look at the age of the car, and the mileage you’d be saying, “Ok, Benz of that age, that sounds about right.”
Then I found an R129 SL600, V12-engined and the same age and with a fraction of the miles of the E-class going for three times the price and I’m left absolutely shocked.
The SL600 is basically selling for nearly five per cent of the cost of the car brand new. But an E-class that’s done more miles, considered to be less premium to the SL (what used to be the flagship of the Mercedes Benz 2-door line-up), has managed to keep its price to maybe 12 to 15 per cent of what its price when brand new.
But this is the oddity of the used car market in Brunei that I mentioned, when it comes to something like a premium luxury car, the Mercedes Benz actually keeps its value the best out of all the car brands out there.
Try and find something like a BMW, Jaguar or Lexus of the same age as the R129 or W124 I mentioned above and you’ll find that that depreciation has hit very, very hard.
One of the reasons the Mercedes W124 keeps its value so well is that the car was built during an age where car makers, especially at Mercedes Benz over engineered their cars. They hardly broke down, and those who looked after their cars don’t have any kind of problem keeping them running.
The R129 is somewhat different in that the parts are more specialised and their aren’t many available in the region and are more likely required to be sourced from Germany. Logistically this is a nightmare for those who encounter any issues, and is one of the reasons why people get put off, not just owning a specialised car like the older SLs but just about any other classic premium luxury or sports car.
Another example I can think of for that to be the case is the Honda NSX, a brilliant steer, comfortable and entertaining when you get the chance to drive one, but the repair bill for something like the power steering can soar into five figure digits... depending on how unlucky you are.
However because these cars hold a special place in the hearts of some individuals, there will always be someone who is willing to stump up the cash for the keys to the proverbial car of their dreams. Friends of mine sold their vintage Toyota Celicas for a pretty penny, cars that would have been destined for the scrap heap without the intervention of their owners wanting to restore and fix the cars. When I heard that they were sold for around $10k I didn’t bat an eyelid, until the person telling me the news said that was the amount the cars had fetched separately.
Going along the same vein, someone recently told me the story of how an old 911 964 was sold for $50k after it had been fettled and given the resto-mod treatment from its owner. Others that I’ve seen floating around for sale are going for about $30K or so, if you can find a seller willing to budge on the price.
Value
It seems that in Brunei one way to ensure your car keeps its value better than others is by making sure you buy one that’s easy to maintain and are reliable to being with.
Toyota, despite its recent turbulent history of recalls (of which very few were affected in Brunei compared to the millions around the world) is another brand that sees its prices maintain to a certain degree, when I say maintain I mean they don’t depreciate quickly.
I saw a Toyota Land cruiser selling for much more than a Mitsubishi Pajero, despite being nine years older. I tell you the Bruneian used car market was weird.
It has made me think twice about plunging into the unknown and getting some cars that I fancied owning... not because I’m worried I might not like them, but when the time comes for me to sell, would I be able to find someone else that places the same value as I do in the car that I’m intending to let go.
Even looking at it from my own personal perspective, it’s all very hypothetical and abstract. So I’m taking the pragmatic view that when I do find a car I’m keen on buying that’s vintage and has some kind of sentimental attachment, I’ll probably end up driving it into the ground. That way when depreciation threatens to sink the value of the cars I love, I’ll just take it with me!
The views are the writer’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of The Brunei Times.
The Brunei Times
http://www.bt.com.bn/features/2014/04/20/brunei%E2%80%99s-used-car-market

Thursday, 8 March 2012

Why Living in Brunei Darussalam

Boat at Belait River Brunei Darussalam
Boat at Belait River Brunei Darussalam

Dear All, I was share and combing the Web for content on Living in Brunei Darussalam and I came across the following post on Mr Brunei Resources' blog. "57 Reasons Why I Like Living in Brunei". According to Mr BR, it was written over 15 years ago by an American, Steve Ryan Brunei Expat. My guess is that Steve was an expat working in Brunei for a while. Mind you, it was written in 1997 but nonetheless, have a read. It's loads of fun!
If any of you know of Steve or of the original source of these 57 reasons, do let me know expat life in Brunei

1. Everybody drives on the wrong side of the road but head-on collisions are very rare.
2. If you wake up in a grouchy mood, it passes quickly when you see all the middle-aged businessmen marching around wearing black fezzes, bright green/purple/yellow/blue primary-colored pajamas, and gold-embroidered skirts.
3. You get an automatic wakeup call every morning from the muezzin at the mosque, even if you forget to set your alarm.

4. Peaceful. Only the military has any guns, and they never shoot them.
5. It's really a change to live in a country where the one guy worth more than $30 billion is a decent, polite, college-educated human being who is genuinely concerned about the welfare of others and not an evil, petty-minded, greedy monopolistic geek peddling lousy software.
6. It's a hoot to see cute giggly teenage Muslim girls wearing their head scarves and generally acting like, well, cute giggly teenage girls.
7. The Government can hang anybody they want, but they never bother to.
8. No obnoxious drunks. (OK! Very few, then!)
9. Very little crime. But they cane the HELL out of anybody who steals your stuff or vandalizes your new car.
10. Admission to the big Jerudong amusement park is free, and so are all the rides.
11. No rednecks, baseball, or tractor pulls.
12. Chinese, Malaysian, Bruneian, Thai, and Filipino girls are so cute.
13. Gurkha soldiers are pleasant chaps and smile all the time, even when marching in formation in the hot sun wearing throat-cutter kukris.
14. No poverty or homeless people spare-changing you.
15. Sultan has more airplanes than the national airline, and cooler ones too.
16. No irritating politicians, deranged TV evangelists, or tiresome election rhetoric.
17. Many amusing English mistakes in local newspaper every single day.
18. All Bruneian bigshots and Gov't Ministers drive fast Turbo Porsches, Mercedes, BMWs, and Jaguars so police never dare to run speed traps.
19. Only 150 Americans here so each of us is considered very interesting, especially to the local female populace.
20. Sultan will wave back to you if you wave to him on the street or while driving.
21. No American football, golf, or basketball shown on television. Traditional national sports in Brunei are spinning big wooden tops (no kidding) and kicking a rattan ball over a badminton net.
22. Kids wear the funny fezzes, pajamas, and head scarves too.
23. Police cars are all BMW 735i's.
24. Weird plants, bugs, and animals everywhere. Big troops of proboscis monkeys in the Temburong forest!
25. Free bananas and coconuts.
26. You can safely see creatures that would give Jacques Cousteau nightmares, just on a visit to the Fish Market.
27. Water taxis have rowdy drivers that enjoy splashing and rocking other boats with their wakes.
28. Fun to learn to shift gears and adjust the radio with your left hand.
29. OK to either A) drive like a maniac, or B) poke along at 15 MPH looking at all the weird stuff by the side of the road. Nobody gets mad; everybody does one or the other.
30. Geckos scuttling all over your house instead of cockroaches. They make funnier noises, too, like: "Chuck - CHUCK!"

31. Cobras and pythons generally stay in the jungle and not in town. But no problem to go find some to play with if you really want.
32. Three words: It's Not Houston. Three more: Or New York.
33. People like to set things on fire over here. It's ok to burn things in your front yard in huge flaming pyres, and nobody gets excited even when the roadsides catch fire, which they frequently do. You can also quickly spot roadside satay snack vendors by spotting the dense smoke and flames billowing from their grills.
34. Cops are polite even when they catch you doing something you're not supposed to be doing.
35. Monitor lizards walk funny, all bowlegged with their stomachs held up as high off the ground as possible.
36. Technical mistakes during local TV evening news are hilarious.
37. Get to see lots of funny-talking British expatriates and ridiculous-looking tourists wearing black socks and shorts.
38. Demonstration of even the simplest UNIX computer-hacking tricks draws genuine gasps of awe at your technical prowess.
39. They have no shortage of HBO, CNN, Discovery Channel, fast computers, and Jolt Cola.
40. Dirt-cheap pirated software and five-dollar bootleg first-run videos even in the big reputable department stores.
41. Funny to watch women who are 4 feet tall wearing head scarves and big sunglasses trying to drive huge Mercedes.
42. You can take up as many spaces as you want when you park and nobody will try to kill you.
43. Odd, interesting local language (Bahasa Malay) but everybody speaks English readily.
44. America considered a weird scary faraway place that few people are ever likely to go to.
45. Plenty of unusual odors you have never smelled before. (Some, you never want to smell again.)
46. At night every bush and hedge in your yard buzzes, chitters, hoots, chirps, croaks, whistles, creaks, moans, honks, rattles, hisses, hums, grunts, etc. etc.
47. Royal Brunei Airlines stewardesses' uniforms. I can't describe it, you'd have to be here to believe it.
48. Karaoke restaurants heavily taxed and strictly regulated as public nuisances.
49. Fun to drive by the Sultan's Palace and watch the policemen in their little guardhouses trying not to look utterly bored out of their minds.
50. Get to surprise everyone by quickly agreeing with their criticisms of the USA's interventionist foreign policies, and then enjoy listening to them complain we don't do enough to help other nations.
51. Get to watch scratchy Indian movies on TV where the hero and heroine wail nasally and dance around each other grimacing in an amusing and incomprehensible manner.
52. All Muslim, Christian, Chinese, and other folks' religious, traditional, national, and what-not holidays are recognized as official days off for the government and the banks; since these employ over 50% of the people of Brunei, everybody takes these days off. This works out to every day being an official holiday from Thanksgiving to the end of February, and about half the working days in the other months. With so many cultures, it's always somebody's holiday.
53. They have real pirates over here, which adds a definite sense of adventure to any yachting excursion.
54. If your change comes out to somewhat more than fifty cents, they'll often round it off in your favor up to the next dollar, except in the big Japanese department store.
55. Jollibee has MUCH better burgers than McDonald's, and they have killer slow-burn chili sauce.
56. No 7-11s, Stop 'N Gos, K-Marts, etc. Stores tend to have more interesting and mellifluous names like (looking out window) - SYARIKAT PERNIAGAAN ANEKA TUJUAN.
57. Interesting, colorful money with little plastic windows in it and cool pictures of Sultan, airport, oil rigs, plants, etc., that seems to spend much more readily and less painfully than real greenbacks.

source
http://www.projekbrunei.com/Home/living-in-brunei.html
http://bruneiresources.blogspot.com/2007/01/57-reasons-why-i-like-living-in-brunei.html

Thursday, 10 May 2007

How to Buying Cars in Brunei...

How to Buying Cars in Brunei
Information About Buying Cars in Brunei. Brunei, a small country with just 380,000 population, yet with one of the world's highest capita GDP, and no income tax, the people indeed can afford to buy new cars more than once in their lifetime.

In Brunei, there's less than 10 major car importer that brings in Japanese, European, Korean and Malaysian cars. China made cars are coming in but Indian made cars (TaTa) already left since there's no demand for them.

From experience and listening from friends, the cars top cars are
a. Toyota Lexus
b. Honda Accord
c. Mercedes and BMW

Toyota cars are imported by North Borneo Trading (NBT) Brunei and has a very nice showroom in Gadong. Every year, NBT Brunei has made the effort to brighten Gadong area with its cultural festival themed decoration which never fails to "amaze" the public since its quite rare in Brunei that private companies made any effort the beautify the scenery. For the record, the servicing and services received from NBT are excellent. Toyota cars are also very fuel efficient and one aunty comment said that Toyota cars has the best air-con in all cars.. it will never break down.

Honda car company importer in Brunei is unfortunately plug with many complaints. The showroom one can see is very minimally decorated, not as grand as NBT's and there's no brochure that could be given to customers!! The range of cars brought into the country is also limited, just about 6 models on display. The ones which are available in Brunei are not as many as the models available in Singapore, but I guess we cant complain... Many people complained about the services made by the inhouse maitenance people, yet since its the only sole distributor of Honda cars, known for its speed and fuel efficiency, Bruneians have to live with it, I guess...

Mercedes and BMW... well, i guess, these European cars are expensive due to its branding as well as the gimmicks available. At the end of the day, since Toyota Lexus brand of cars are not only cheaper to maintain, but also fuel efficient, many are all eyeing Toyota Lexus for their future luxurious car ownership.

d. Nissan
Nissan cars are not known to be fuel efficient and there are even problems with the 
X-Trail models which the company is no longer importing...

e. Suzuki
The newer models are cute and elegant looking and yet because these vehicles are not fuel efficient, I guess the long run practicalities outweights the decision to purchase this vehicles...
Source :
http://phoenix4bn.blogspot.com/2007/04/buying-cars-in-brunei.html

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