YOU COULDN"T BE MORE WRONG - Damn - looks like I'll have to do the math for youIt sounds like the PROBLEM is that D&H has decided not to cut prices to the bone on any PDP order that the buyer backs out of. Its not about the $500 deposit, if it were then a new buyer could pay whatever price D&H orginally agreed to when the orginal buyer made the deposit. D&H is going to lose the deposit but they are going to sell those FJRs for a lot closer to MSPR than they did on the PDP program.
Small profit on any PDP sale, potentially a much larger profit when a buyer backs out of the PDP program because D&H gets a bike on the floor without having to make a deposit.
D&H will sell an 06 FJR A for $11,499.00
The original purchaser pays the $500 deposit and owes $10,999.
The original purchaser is the ONLY one D&H can afford to let roll the bike out the door for $10,999 because that is the only way D&H gets the original $500 back!!!
Anyone else desiring to purchase the bike from D&H will have to pay $11,499 and the original guy is out the $500 (Yamaha keeps it, D&H doesn't).
Now if you want to be a good guy and give the original guy his $500 back you will be paying $11,999 for the bike that you could have bought for $11,499 but will still probably be paying less than getting it from any other dealer.
It's the MARGIN that allows dealers to purchase PDP bikes in their family members names knowing they can still sell them for more than $12,000 and just forget about the PDP money.
SIMPLE ENOUGH????? :beee:
This is an example, all numbers are hypothetical, and I don't work for D&H. I did sleep at an Holiday Inn last night
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