HaulingAss
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 3, 2020
- Threads
- 28
- Messages
- 10,426
- Reaction score
- 20,966
- Location
- Western Washington, USA
- Vehicles
- Cybertruck DM, 2010 F-150, 2018 Performance Model 3, 2024 Performance Model 3
You are correct that I'm assuming Tesla has only removed the clause for non-Cybertruck Purchase/Sale agreements. This is an assumption of mine based upon the known fact that Tesla likes to keep their contracts as short and simple as practical. It made no sense for 95% of Tesla buyers to have to skip over that clause when Tesla can simply use a special Purchase and Sale Agreement for Cybertruck sales.My friend, you ignore the consequences of my post to continue on with agenda.
Fact 1: Tesla pulled the clause
Fact 2: You don't know who put it there, or if it was someone misguided and pulled
Fact 3: there's no evidence they will add it back
Fact 4: It in no way diminishes the argument that the mathematics of the ordering process and the extended delay in deliveries over years, the clause would in any way meaningfully reduce the wait time and position of a legitimate buyer
Simply the math is not subject interpretation, as might be the clause or the consequences of them.
Do some modelling, and get back to me how many scalpers you think there were and what positions they could have in the line, and how that affects your position in line.
Remember though that you could NOT select the quantity of CT on your order, and would have to order one after the other in sequence, in which time at least 2-300 to 1000 other people could jump in front of you in the line.
Accordingly, the clause was too broad and undefined to be a valid pathway just to mitigate scalpers alone, in fact it was decidedly against the privileges of a legitimate buyer, and done nothing for scalping at all, who could just wait a year and still end up in the same beneficial market anyway. So why bother.
I think this is a valid analysis, I'm sorry you don't. I would suggest that your personal wants and desires are influencing your analysis. I'm just making the best conclusions I can, given what we know.
I also think your analysis underestimates the number of people that clause (if included) would dissuade from purchase. This will move people up the line much faster than most people are anticipating, based solely on the number of total reservations. I say this because I know a lot of people placed reservations without knowing if they actually needed a pickup truck or whether a new truck was a financially smart move, simply because they knew they could likely drive it around for a couple of months, show it to all their friends, and sell it for a profit to pay off the loan and have a few bucks left in their pocket.
Because it was widely expected the new Cybertruck would be in very short supply initially, as new Tesla models tend to be, and because the deposit was only $100, it was very easy for people to put in an order "just in case". This clause will cause a mass exodous of non-serious buyers who really can't afford a brand new pickup truck which would move genuine buyers to the front of line much faster. My estimation with the clause in place is that 50-75% of reservations will cancel.
Geniune buyers should be rejoicing loudly at the news that Tesla takes the problem of flipping seriously and that the clause remains in the Purchase and Sale Agreement used for Cybertruck purchases. I think you will find it will be there. The release of that clause in the universal Purchase and Sale Agreement was not a figment of someones imagination and it doesn't look to be a forgery. The fact that it was removed, means much less than the fact that it was there in the first place. That's my analysis and I'm sticking to it. Tesla wants to avoid the ramp of the Cybertruck from becoming anymore of a shitshow than it needs to be.
Time will prove one of us right.
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