Or average age is decreasing, which I love to see because we have younger people littering the market. And I think your laugh maybe was, you know, we had a lot of doge boy and a bit choreator. Exactly. Did you see Mr. Beast just shredded a Lamborghini? I did. Yeah. Right guys, something else. Did you sell that Lambo?
What's up, everyone? This is Car dealership guy. You're listening to the Car dealership guy podcast, which is my effort to give you access to the most unbiased and transparent insights into the car market. Let's get into today's episode.
Jason Putnam is co-founder and managing partner of Tactical Fleet, Texas's largest exotic use car dealer. In this conversation, we discussed the secrets to selling exotic cars, the fast rise of crypto money buyers, selling his company to a public company called Sonic Automotive, how much money he makes selling exotic cars, the cars he refuses to sell his own friends, and what car he personally drives. Plus some fun, or should I say authentic moments throughout this episode? I think you'll absolutely love it.
Alright, we got Jason Putnam on the pod. Jason, how's it going? Doing well. Thanks for having me.
好的,我们请到了Jason Putnam上节目。Jason,最近怎么样?我过得很好。谢谢你邀请我。
Jason, as if the use car business is not tough enough, you decide to go exotic. Yeah, I don't know how you do it, but we're going to find out today. You know, can you start just giving us your background, your story? How did you get to this point?
Yeah, sure. You know, ran out of college. I graduated and owned iron. I thought I was going to go Wall Street and, you know, get into VC or be an analyst, and not the right timing for that, obviously. I always loved to cook cars, so I moved to Dallas. To work for a startup, long story short, that took too long. So I started selling porshows. Turned out I was halfway decent at it. I left Dallas. And what do you mean by that? Like, what was the startup that you went to? And like, how do you just randomly wake up one day and start selling porshows? How does that work?
Yeah, fair. I guess I skipped over some details. It was a startup in the healthcare space. They were doing like an inpatient monitoring system and, you know, 09, 8, 9, 10 was just not the right time to raise capital. So I never really got off the ground. And so I spun my wheels for a few months and afraid of the family was like, you know, you've always loved cars. You should try to sell cars as well as like, it ought to be a car sale. I don't know about all that. But I was afforded the opportunity to start selling porshows at Park Place. And Park Place is for anyone that doesn't know a massive dealer group in the South in Texas. Yeah.
So started to push you there in sale, became the new car manager after a couple of years. And then I actually left Dallas and went to Nashville to run up portfolio of car dealerships. So I was the the variable officer, the sales director there. He had 12 brands in six states. It was yeah, very interesting. So I went from Porto to like Ford, Shedding, Tia, Subaru, went on that side of the business.
And then a friend of mine, Chris Bordeaux, became my business partner. He and I started in the same sales training class in 2009 at Park Place. He's like, Hey, come back to Dallas. Come back to Dallas. Let's start our own dealership. And at that time, we had a client who has a multinational company with a couple thousand vehicles that didn't have any fleet management in ours. So that's where the fleet part of our name came from. He needed somebody to come in and really manage his fleet long story short after about a year of putting that project together. Fourth and cold, they bailed. So Chris and I looked at each other and we're like, let's just do what you've asked on sales sports cars. So we called four or five clients, took a couple meetings and got one client to say yes, gave us 500 grand and said if you can find a space and get going, go for it.
Oh, so you called up your prior clients and pretty much asked them to invest. Was that like the, yeah, we'll get rolling, right? So you give you 500k. What do you do with that 500k?
Somehow we got a lease on a 30,000 square foot warehouse. You know, our financials were literally a checking account that was three days old that had 500 grand in it, but it worked. And we spent $474,000 rehabbing the warehouse. And then at the same time, holy shit. Yeah. Did you guys spend some money? Did you make a sale by this point? Was this all pre pre revenue? It was kind of, you know, we got the lease at August of 2018, started selling cars kind of in October using the same capital. And then by January, I think what lot. But at that time, we were working with about a million dollars of working capital. So not a lot, especially in the legislature.
I mean, I think of everyone in the use car space that I know that started like you from, you know, just, you know, nothing really. Everyone that I know took a very lean approach. You took a very aggressive approach, which clearly, I mean, hindsight's 2020, but it worked out for you. Yeah. I mean, that's risky. That's ballsy. Good for you.
We knew, especially if Dallas, the type of clients that we wanted to attract, we had to make what was it 1980s tilt wall kind of crappy, dumpy warehouse nice. So we stripped it, you know, down to the studs and put it in exposed duct work and all the walls were white. We just kind of wanted it to be an art gallery for cars. It was still pretty quaint, but we knew that we had to try to be different and attract that client that is used to, you know, marble countertops and state-of-the-art facilities and all that kind of stuff.
So how do you attract that client? Like when you, so you said you're launching a dealership and especially an exotic dealership, right? Like I said, it's already hard enough to sell used cars, you know, at scale and do it well, but then exotic is like a whole other level. How do you even attract that client? Like what are you doing day one? How do you market that?
You know, it's super interesting. I had been out of this space with respect to selling cars, day-to-day to clients for four or five years. Chris, my business partner was one of the top Bentley role salesmen of the country. He was also a park place and he left there to immediately start tactical fleet. And we kind of thought we would be able, we didn't kind of, we really thought we'd be able to bank on his book of business and selling cars for 10 years and having the relationships, relationships. Yeah, exactly. And that was our whole focus, right? The whole auto industry had become so transactional, nothing against like a carbana or any of those models, but the human element had been kind of removed in our opinion. And so what we wanted to do is bring back kind of the relationship style, selling, if you will, where we don't want to sell you one car, we want to sell you all your cars. And you know, specifically him, he had been hamstring to selling Bentley or Rolls product a little bit of a clan. And now it's okay, we've got a clean slate, we can sell whatever we want. But what was super interesting is that book of business didn't really help us. It was all new people.
So our whole goal was to set up a business that was a little bit more transparent and a lot more user friendly. So if you walked in our store and you liked a car, you could be in and out in 20 minutes paperwork, we're super fast. We were pushing product. Very, very, dude, I have so many questions you're killing me right now. Yes. So wait, like 50 million questions to go, but we'll start with one. Okay, how so if relationship based was not the way you got your first customers, how did you get your first customers?
We took it really kind of, I would say aggressive approach on advertising on auto trader. At that time, not to get into the minutia, there was a kind of an underutilized portion of their advertising product called alphas. And what we did was basically an alpha says for a given market, any search for McLaren in El Paso, we would be the first ad to pop up. So instead of buying just an RDM S or our local area for Dallas, we bought alphas of Los Angeles, Atlanta, New York, Chicago, Charlotte, Miami. So what we were trying to do is just get our name out there. And then we didn't do any traditional advertising with respect to print ads or billboards or so no brand advertising strictly performance marketing performance marketing. And then we tried to be early and aggressive on Instagram.
Really well, we have a good good following. It's not a crazy number, but you know, 50 60,000.
非常好,我们有一支很好很强大的追随者队伍。虽然并不是一个疯狂的数字,但你知道,大约是五六万人。
Oh, wait, we should keep that in the podcast. I hear someone I hear someone revving the engine behind you. I love that. So a piece of Simon. What is that Jason? What car is that 2020 for a piece of a pair of tres convertible? That's great. I love it.
So you mentioned Instagram, did that work for you when it came? So and on a quick tangent, like what's your average sales price for a car?
所以你提到了Instagram,对你有用吗?另外,简单说说,你们的汽车的平均销售价格是多少?
Average sales price, potentially, we've been marching down over the last six to 12 months to kind of, I guess, be respectful the current economic times of trying to stay in front of it. So we used to be this time last year, about 275,000. We hover around 240 to 250 right now. Okay. And all right, so going back to what you were saying, so auto trader Instagram. So so these customers, like were they strictly from auto trader also Instagram?
Really Instagram, what we found was great for brand awareness. And then the first year to two years, that was our main focus was just getting our name out there. Especially in this space, you know, there's a lot of skepticism and kind of going back to what I talked about about a book of business, despite transacting with clients and building relationships for over a decade for Chris and even myself, there was a little bit of skepticism, you know, are these guys going to make it? What are they doing to the new kid on the block from a dealership perspective? So Instagram was great for brand building. And what's super interesting, we don't really sell any cars on Instagram, but a lot of our higher net worth clients, you know, we're generally male, let's say 40 to 60 years old that are on Instagram. They like the attention. They like the kids get excited about the cars. I don't know if it's an ego planet or just the fact that you can feel cool by watching, you know, kind of our stories and our cars. So Instagram's been a good brand builder for us, I guess, very interesting.
So going back to go back to your story, right, you were mentioning your, your kind of star, your your rise. Can you walk us through to present day? I know, I know you've gone through a lot through these last couple of years.
Sure. So go ahead. Yeah, I mean, it was a, it was a really fun time to start. I think we had no, we had no idea that the market was going to do what it was going to do. Right. We saw this meteoric rise and pre on values, which was great. And really advantageous for our business. Spinning forward, you know, we went from one location, we added a second in the latter part of 2021. And then we added a third in the beginning of 2022. So really, really explosive growth. We ran all three stores with less than 30 people. And that includes our Dallas location where five of those people are just doing PPF and vinyl installation. So really what's PPF? Yeah, sorry, pay protection film. So it's the clear plastic that you put on the front of cars. Yeah. Just to protect from rock chips. So explosive growth at a very short period of time during kind of unprecedented, you know, as you know, times of the used car market where you were buying a car and then two weeks later was worth more than you paid for it both though, which is just unusual, right? And then we saw what I think was a pretty major correction this time last year, when the market really pulled back. And so now I think we're in more normalized times with respective values, meaning, you know, cars would appreciate it as they should before we jump into that though, you're a humble guy, but you sold to Sonic automotive, right? Oh, yeah, yes, sir. Tell me about that. I mean, how did this come about? When did this happen? How much are you like, you know, sailing off on a yacht right now? Are you know, off to the to the cave in islands? I mean, what's the deal over here? I would. You know, we had a good friend that came through and had been in the automotive space and then sold to Sarek and wanted to acquire us. He just liked our business model, what we were doing. We couldn't come to terms there and he had said, hey, I'm gonna bring I'm gonna bring a good friend of mine by his name is Jeff Dyke and I'm like Jeff Dyke, Jeff Dyke. Why does that sound familiar? Quick Google president of Sonic and I was like, oh, okay. Walk through the space in about 20 minutes. He asked us a bunch of questions and then he looked at our mutual friend and said, are you buying them? Are we buying them? Let's get this done. And about 10, 12 weeks later, we had to deal with, you know, full-size parents, see, we were running really, really hard with very level of working capital. So on any given month selling seven to $8 million with the cars with four million of working capital. So we were doing some consignment, but really we're out running our cash. And so Sonic brought and afforded us, you know, a big open checkbook, which is why we, you know, grew to three locations. This time last year, June, July, we had $100 million with inventory on the ground. So really allowed us to grow and do what would have hopefully happened for Chris and I organically. And 10 years we did in, you know, a year and a half or two.
What was the price tag they paid for you guys? I can't say it, but I appreciate you asking. Oh, it's not public info. Correct. I figured public company. What year did this happen? We sold at the end of 2020, so the November of 2020. Oh, wow. Good timing. Okay. And can you share like, what were you doing? What was your like net income at the time? Can you share that stuff? Yeah. So it's interesting. As an issue, we were out running our capital. The first year in 2019, we did 34 million in sales. We doubled the next year and did just short of 70. And then in 2020, we were at like 130, 140 in terms of revenue. We were, I would say kind of break even, ish pre acquisition based on our cost of capital. We didn't have the credit facilities to have an expensive money to buy at the inventory. So I think they were buying kind of us and the story of the opportunity and the other. Got it. And so let's, I want to get into some, some financial because I'm really curious here. What do you typically make? Like what's your average gross profit per unit on a luxury and exotic car? Sure. You know, we always kind of shoot for 10%. So we do it on more of a percentage basis. It really varies. You know, sometimes it's 2%. Sometimes it's 12. And a lot of that has to do with our philosophy on reconditioning is a little bit different. So we don't acquire any worry from options. And so that's interesting. I was going to ask you that question too. Where do you get your inventory?
Yeah. Tubs repeat business. We very early on, based on providing what I think are really fair trade values, kind of a certain ourselves is the dealership that not necessarily will overpay, but it'll give top dollar for trade ends or just to sell cars out, right? You know, a lot of, you see a more now with the compression of the market, a lot of dealers will say, well, I'm not going to buy your car unless you buy something from me. And I go, you know, I'd love to have your inventory if you buy something for most great, but 2016 target with 10,000 miles, sure, I'll take it. So yeah, working on relationships and networks, being kind of proactive and approaching dealers, Mercedes dealers that give a Ferrari on trade or something like that, I would like to think our names on the short list. So that's where we, so all your inventory you're saying is like relationship based trade-ins, other dealers, like nothing from auction. Correct. Well, yeah. Do you ever buy anything at auction? Ever anything? You know, I've used ACV a little bit, which is more of a dealer to dealer auction, kind of similar to it, OBE. But no, I've never bought anything in Manhattan for this business.
So like you're reconditioning, right? Yeah. Average, a used car dealer may spend $1,000 on reconditioning a car, at a shop, you know, non-certified tax, or maybe outsourcing. How do you do that? I mean, you're dealing with serious, I mean, liabilities, you're, these are expensive cars. You can't afford to make mistakes.
You know, early on, we saw about potentially bringing service at the house. It's a great revenue driver, and it's a good value add for our clients. We also recognize that when people go in for service, they're not happy, right? Because they're spending money on their car, tires are not flat. So we wanted to focus on the kind of fun set of the business, which is the excitement of the car.
Yeah. On top of that, with the breadth of brands we carry, I mean, our core brands are in no particular order. Portia Ferrari Lambo rolls Bentley, Astin, and we do a little bit of a clan. We would have had to have, you know, 10, 12 tax just to cover our brands. So we've got great working relationships with the OEMs. We've also got some wonderful highline independent service facilities here in Dallas that we utilize in our philosophy years, especially because we sell cars all over the country. We don't want to sell a car like the known issue or sell you a car, ship it to New York and it beats tires or it's missing a T. So I would say we probably over-reconditioned our cars with everything. You know, I would say our average recall is closer to five grand a car. If a car has one key, it's getting down.
Wow. Yeah. Well, if I saw a five grand recon ticket on a car, I don't know what happened to that car. I mean, that thing is going back to auction or something. And that's half of what you spent on a McLaren, which is if you look at my inventory, we have a couple average ticket for a McLaren is about 10 grand, even a short mile car. So yeah. But anyway, we try to make our car super nice so that we can send them anywhere side of the city. Makes sense. Sleep well at night.
All right. So I want to talk more about you mentioned earlier, just like the ramp up, the ramp down $100 million in inventory. Is that still what you have today? No, I think, you know, candidly I anticipated hired demand for our Beverly Hills location. And then we moved into a new facility here at Dallas and kind of see behind me a year ago, June. And that really coincided with the market kind of taking a downturn and prices corrected. So it is your question. No, we're seeing about $40 million with the cars on the ground right now, between our Charlotte and Dallas. How have you managed this correction? 2022 was a brutal year for exotic car values. You know, how did you manage to that? Do you take big losses? Yeah, sure. We historically haven't really realized many losses. In fact, we don't only not buy cars at the auction, but we typically don't dispose of the auction either. We try to sell out of whatever we have. You know, but I'd be remiss to say, yeah, we did, we took some hits for sure. And but learned a lot. We were rolling in a little heavy at the wrong time. And so we moved quickly to kind of come back our inventory and sell through some age units. But it wasn't fun. The first half of 2022 was actually great, super profitable. The second half definitely took took some loans on some floor.
How long do you hold a car in inventory? It's a great question. So we manage and typically try to do a 90 day turn, depending on make model. And really, we kind of get granular. We go down to the trim level to try to get the right product mix. I'd like to think we're relatively good at what we do. But at the end of the day, we are trying to acquire inventory and guess what the consumer is going to want. And so we don't always get it right. But more often than not, we do. So we try to manage to have out a Maggie nature 90 day turn, which makes sense. I mean, exotic cards, more expensive. Average dealers, let's just like 60 day or 50 day.
So go back to gross profit per unit. You mentioned 10%. How is that broken down, though? Are you aiming targeting to make 10% on the car? Are you selling like warranties? Are you service contracts insurance products? How does that work?
Yeah. So out of the game, we shied away from a lot of those products because we were a two-man with a with a detailer and a porter. So I guess there's more of us. And when we found the veracity with which our clients were creating cars, we were going to spend more time trying to cancel warranties and get their money back. We wanted to remove any of the quote unquote key cases that we could. So we didn't have a lot of product offerings.
And then, you know, I'll tell you it was super I open again. I probably should have been more attuned to this having run a big dealer group. But that'll speak part of a really big dealer group. All the banks are courting you and they want your business. All of a sudden, you go out and start your own dealership. We've only been in business for six months. You go to a- You're nobody.
Yeah, nobody. We quickly became Woodside Credit's, you know, one of their biggest fans because that was one of our only resources. So with that, we really didn't have a lot of offerings in terms of back-end product. And that's part of the reason we brought up a wrap or a PPEF department in house that was kind of our back-end product.
And then the the rate at which our clients were trading cars because we had access to all these different brands was so fast. There wasn't really a need to sell product. Now that's pivoted a little bit. We do have a wheel and tire and extended warranty options now. But we don't sell anything that we don't, you know, firmly stand behind. The last thing you want is a client upset because the $6,000 dollar award shoe sold them doesn't cover something.
Yeah. Well, we've been really picky and kind of slow to enter that space. And our finance penetration is, you know, 30-35%. So it's always a focus, but we deal with just a ton of cash and typically your cash buyers less app to buy an extended warranty or a road hazard product.
Oh, really? Yeah. Why though? Like, are they just expecting that if they have an issue with their, you know, $300,000 card that the manufacturer will take care of it? Or what's the plan?
I think that's part of it. I also think of this base, you know, we're not selling people. They're generally they're daily drivers with the exception of 80s and G wagons and more mass market vehicles that we carry. It's a Sunday driver. It's crazy to hear you say G wagon and mass market in the same sense because any normal person would be like, that's, you know, on the exotic side. And for you, it's probably like the, you know, the Nissan Altima, the bread and butter. You know, we've sold a ton of them.
I think only 80 G wagons so far this year. So that's just how many? 70 or 80 something in one there. Yeah. Did you see my, did I posted about this like baby G wagon that they want to come out with? Did you see that?
Yeah, we were laughing about it. What's the deal with that? Is that going to happen? Are they going to come out with a mini G wagon?
是的,我们开玩笑地谈论了这件事。这是怎么回事?那真的会发生吗?他们会推出一款迷你G级吗?
I think so. Yeah, I don't remember which executive of Mercedes was kind of on the record and said you're going to see a movie called a sister brother G wagon or something. A little crushing. I mean, they're awesome cars. We've, I never would have anticipated, you know, we started was right with a new G wagon was about to come out that they'd be going for over MSRP is back in the day you could get a good discount on a G wagon. They're too expensive. But here we are.
Tell me more about the G wagon. Did you, did you follow the G wagon? You know, madness last year on, you know, they were selling at auction for like 280,000 suddenly, you know, couple months later and like 220,000. I mean, do you remember that madness?
Of course. Yeah, I always try to be kind of behind the curve on that, which is going to sound odd. But when there's a big craze on a car, they're bringing huge numbers over MSRP. I like to wait. Six, eight weeks, even a couple months just to see where the dust is going to settle. Yeah. Just because it always comes back, right? The hovers, the G wagons, um, horses are still kind of bringing crazy money for R. E's, of course. But you know, I had a totally, and a guy, uh, one of our top sales that was really psyched. He was able to get a key and tell you, right, a sticker for his wife. And I just remember thinking he's like, they're selling for 10 over, but I got a key at sticker. I was like, oh, this has to correct. Right. So yes, we did play in the G wagons base, but I don't think we were as aggressive as sub dealers just because I could have rationalized a hundred thousand dollars over and not limited edition SUV.
So yeah, pretty much what is what is your best selling car right now? There has to be some model or some make or something, right?
嗯,目前你们最畅销的汽车是什么呢?肯定有一款车型或者某个品牌,对吧?
Yeah. Um, I guess we shall attend on that level. That's a core product for us. We do sell it. But we do really well with Ferrari, a ton of 48, California, those Portositos. So any of those, a lot of the contention and comparable volume numbers. So if you identify a trend, what do you do to source that vehicle?
Definitely. In the last year I added a guy to my team and call on who's been in the highlight space kind of as a broker for over a decade. And you know, it's sometimes pretty old school. We troll auto trader, we call clients, or you know, we keep a really kind of a robust CRM or database with our current clients. And we'll people that we now have a certain car and try to trade about the thing else.
It seems like you're you're such a bespoke service. Like how do you scale that when you think about, you know, you mentioned through stores and I understand that, you know, one of them, you said you're closing now or closed to walk me through that.
I'd like to see we're still figuring out the scaling process. We opened Charlotte at the latter part of 2021. That's where corporate offices for Sonic. That store's been great. It's a little smaller for us. It's about 20,000 square feet. And then one kind of sea sales person there and then a support staff built around him with detailers and quarters.
We had the opportunity to take over an existing space in Beverly Hills, across from the Audi store. It was the old Howdy Beverly Hills service center. That was a legacy lease from Beverly Hills BMW from 20, 25 years ago. And really thought that that would be kind of the perfect spot for us, right? The heart of Beverly Hills, the sports cars. And you know, candidly that that store under Perforant, it just didn't do what we thought it was going to do. On top of that, the Beverly Hills, BMW, sort of cited they needed more space. So after about a year, it was just a good opportunity to say we tried it and exit.
But scaling has been interesting. I think we, you know, in hindsight, didn't get enough credit to having kind of an individual in market that really has a book of business and is a mover. Like Chris, I mentioned previously that that didn't help us out of the gate. It was really weird kind of around that two year markets like, okay, these guys are sticking around. And then all the old clients kind of came back into the fold. So scaling, I think it's important at this level of the business to have somebody in market who really is established and those people and can kind of lean on previous sales and client history to try to boot product.
Yeah, that makes sense now. And I would add on to that, like, is there, is there something to be said for you to have this like one massive, auto mall, like, you know, 1000 cars where you're tracking you from all over the country, as opposed to kind of littering these locations throughout the country and all these different places. Like, what do you think about that?
I think it's really interesting. You know, we purpose built a facility here in Dallas. We've moved into about a year ago. That's 100,000 square feet. So we have under air conditioning and heat. It's fully climate controlled. The ability to fill a couple hundred cars, which at this price point is, you know, pretty expansive inventory. I like the idea of having, you know, our Charlotte location. It's a great jump off to the East Coast.
So what's really interesting is that you would say kind of consolidating everything here in Dallas, which is like the bottom of the smile belt would be the smart thing to do. But, you know, the car pieces is being what it is. I could have a car age on me here for 60, 65 days, I'll move it to Charlotte. And you know, it happened last week. We sold the car while we were in transit. And the only thing that changed was into our Charlotte inventory. Oh, wow. The guy in Florida that bought it, it popped up at his search radius for auto trader. It's like, there is some, I think, huge benefits to having a room. Yeah, different location.
That's interesting. I would have thought buying at these price points, you know, people would not really discriminate location wise, but I guess it kind of makes sense. At the end of the day, it's near you, you know, just more accessible.
Well, it was crazy. I mean, you're on the business, right? So you understand that shipping cars is something we do every day. You'd be amazed at how many people, especially at this price point, don't know that we can ship a car from Dallas to Florida for 15 other bucks. It's not the price. It's like the lack of understanding that these cars move. It's really interesting.
Right. Yeah. Who is your like average customer? Like, what's the profile here? Like, you know, how much money do they earn annually? Like how old are they? Tell me about that.
You know, I think that's shifted in the last few years historically, our average client was, you know, 30 at 60, maybe half a million plus in income, but our average age is decreasing, which I love to see because we have younger people entering the market.
And I think your laugh, maybe it was, you know, we had a lot of doge boy in Bitcoin. Exactly. My life, well, I was like the crypto money, the crypto money, baby, the crypto money and like the live streaming video game, or my is really interesting. We've got several young clients that are video game programmers, live stream and do Twitch, all that kind of stuff. So it's different.
Yeah. Did you see Mr? Did you see Mr? Beast just shredded a Lamborghini? I did. Yeah. Like I something else. He pulled down a million last year. So he's probably like, yeah, he's fine. Did you sound that Lambo? I did not. We got to get you on there. Yeah. Yeah. That's really cool.
Now, what about online buying, right? Like you mentioned that you moved it to Charlotte, but are people buying like, you know, eBay Motors, like been around since like 2000, right? Buying cars online. Do you sell a lot online? Like remotely sight unseen?
You know, it's interesting. Looking back to when we have three stores, the percentage of our kind of online side on scene sales was very different. So Texas at the Dallas location, over half of our business is local. What I say local call it Texas proper. The balance of that. Sometimes it gets even as high as maybe 60, 70%. The rest of them lead the state. So we ship to both coasts out of the country. But then you look at our Charlotte store and maybe 25, 30% of the sales stay local. And then the rest are going out of state Florida and then up the Eastern seaboard. So it really depends on which story you're looking at. But we do a ton of online side on scene sale.
You know, historically people would fly in and they'd want to see and touch it. I'd like to think we have a good enough recommendation now that people trust the process and our product. So more often than our people don't fly out or come see the car, we just put a lot of truck and drop it off their house.
Yeah, that's impressive. You built quite a reputation. What's the most expensive car you've sold side and scene? Probably a set up, you know, somewhere around that million dollar price point range. We should off an F 50 at Sotheby's last year, which technically the buyer was a present right? He bought it side out. So you do well.
Well, we tried one. I found a really short mile. F 50 had a separate rate of miles on it. The re-optioned off it. It might be so that that was kind of a something we just would try. That car was bought and brought a little over $5 million. So that was a big web.
Yeah, that's interesting. Now that I think about it, you know, once you I'm going to just take a wild guess here. But once you probably eclipse like the maybe $300 or $400,000 range, does you know, does price discover to become more of a challenge? Like do you have to do more of these auction types? I'm not like, we all know the price of like, you know, on G 63, a 2022 G wagon. That's pretty easy. But you know, 400,000 plus, like, does that become more challenging?
It does because in a certain respect, what's a 2019 Phantom where there's four of them. So I have to look at the market and be competitive, but also take a little bit of an educated guess on what that car is worth and what it's going to bring.
So what's the toughest car right now to get like the toughest exotic car on the most in demand, but also the toughest. What are you saying?
现在最难获得的是哪款车呢,像需求最高的超级豪华车一样,同时也是最坚固耐用的。你在说什么?
You know, new Ferraris are always really tough. That new Porsche product GT3 RS is a really what my opinion is kind of crazy, buddy, to 250 over MSRP. Those are always always going to be tough to get outside of that. You still see you wag is being bringing a bit of a preview of some of the new Lamborghini product. But I'd say the hot hand right now is pushing Ferrari.
But are you feeling any of the impacts of interest rates? Like is it impacting your business in any way here?
你有感受到利率的任何影响吗?比如说,它是否在任何方面影响你的业务?
What's super counterintuitive and I'd say are seeing a little frustrating is that with the rise of interest rates, our finance penetration has actually gone up. So despite money being more expensive, I take people that are moving into some of this type of product are using a bit more leverage and are more traditional cash buyers are kind of sitting on the sidelines and waiting. So they're not buying, but the guy that would buy four or five cars a year is just going, all right, let me watch. So it's interesting.
I didn't buy her. Who's the buyer at that age for streets? I've gone up like, you know, I don't know, five, six percent, whatever, and is now using more leverage to buy an exotic car. Who is this person? A lot of people that are pretty affluent and have just, you know, kind of had their ass handed to them with a stock market or go and screw it, I'll buy a Ferrari and it cost me eight percent of a year. I don't care. I'd see some of that. That's crazy. Some stretch. I feel like it's so dumb. Like put that money into some treasuries or just pay cash at that point. I mean, why pay the eight percent or whatever they're paying? I mean, what are they paying? What are the rates right now in these cars? Tier one credit, you're somewhere in the upper sixes to mid eight. Wow, which was crazy. Historically, it's really not. But you know, the last 10 years, money's been free. Yeah, it's just changing activity the way you think about it. It's been really interesting to watch and kind of a post-COVID era.
A lot of clients are saying, you know, I see a drive a stock, right? So that's not very fun. But I could drive a Ferrari and if I lose a little money, I don't care. What you also have, which is really kind of a unique anomaly is people that aren't needing the exotic space and for a short period of time or buying cars and then selling them and making money. Now, when things come home to roost and pre-owned prices are leveling or becoming more normalized, they don't understand that it cost them 50 grand to own that Aston Martin. And it's like, well, yeah, that's how this works. So it's been pretty interesting.
Do you have to bail anyone out? Like if people have you dealt with some people here that are taking baths in these cars? Yeah, sure. I mean, nothing crazy. I'd like to think we did an overpriced out of the gate, right? We never are the most expensive car in the market. But definitely some people that also bought cars and other dealerships and way overpaid that are upside down. We hadn't seen negative equity in the last, I'd say 24 months. And you're starting to see the people that paid 280 for that G-Wag and come back to trade a year later. And it's worth 180. It's a bit of a problem. Yeah. How do you deal with that? Or what are you telling them? Are people just trying to get out of these cars? Whether you, I'm not saying you sold it, but generally speaking, are you finding that lots of people are in these situations though? Not so much with the negative equity. We see a little bit of that, but more so, people that bought the toy and now they need the cash for whatever reason. So they're leaving the market for a little while. We get a lot of people that early create their cars here is in Texas. We could hold a tax credit for future use. So we are seeing people shedding their toys, the third and fourth cars. They're wanting to sell. So you ask where we're getting our inventory, the phone's raining with a lot of people that are just shedding some toys. That makes sense.
What would you say right now? Could you even say this, but what's the best exotic car deal in the market right now? Is there such thing? I guess deal is all relative, right? Or maybe what's the most oversupplied, like something like that, where you could truly have the most pricing power as a consumer or negotiation leverage, say? I think it's all relative because unfortunately, the best point of put deal means there's a lack of demand in the space, right? So there's cars you could get a huge discount on, but that's because they're like, I think they're going to keep and what are those claims? McLarens are corrected. But to that end, a deal is all relative because they're just so maintenance, they're tough to own. And it's tough. I always think Porsche is a great value for what they do. It turbo-s is now a $250,000 car, but it hangs with stuff in the three, four, five, $600,000 price range. So value, I guess, is relative, right? Because it's still expensive. But a lot of cars are available.
Are there any exotic cars that you just recommend staying away from completely? This is just junk. Don't touch it. I always say, I will sell a friend of a client of a client. Oh, he should just won't do it. And that's more so because I think that's really a race car company that's trying to make consumer cars and they just have a quick up at it right yet. I think the product's good, but it's not something you'd want to own out of warranty. So that's not a luxury car by any stretch of imagination. But remember that story from a couple years or five years ago, whatever about the Maserati? Is it like the pedals that we're breaking? Remember that? Oh, yeah. Dibley's motor's falling out. Oh, my God, dude. Yeah. I guess, well, it was on my mind. But yeah, that's a brand we shy far away from. Yeah, yeah. I won't forget that. I started looking at that very differently since that day.
I guess the magic question, what do you drive? It's a great question. I get that question a lot. So yeah, internet of cars every day or every other day, I try to make sure, especially if the car has a little bit of my response as well. But I personally probably own the most just pouches, pouches, fine 11s. They just hold their value. People love them. And it seems like it's like a timeless brand. Like, you know, it's also what I cut my teeth on. So ideally driven, I have really daily driven that I 11 to the last 15 years on and off. So just require really like, all right.
So I want to move on. I want to move on to some macro before we wrap up. I'm just curious from your perspective, like, what do you what do you see for the future of the exotic car space? And when we think about like the next five years, right, like, do you think that the space is going to keep heating up? Like, what's going to change? How do you how do you, how are you kind of forecasting the future here? Yeah, you know, our crystal ball is still a little foggy, right? More amazing educated guessings just like everyone else. I do think and you already have seen it, there's been some consolidation of the market. Good better otherwise with the cost of capital increasing, the smaller entities, I think are struggling to pay for floor plan.
And, you know, it's not lost on us either. Money's expensive. So caring inventory is is is always a burden. It wasn't for the last few years when money was relatively free. So I think you'll see some consolidation. I also think you are, you know, when I started in the business, call it 15 years ago, average person went to three car dealerships, right? Now it's down to like one page. So you're seeing a really informed consumer that does a ton of research and that really knows what they want. So in my opinion, having a customer, you know, centric focus on the experience, I think is what's going to provide value moving forward. There's a lot less selling going on and what we like consulting, right? Like radiation, I've got a quarterly dollar just bed. Is it a turbo S or is it a 48 or? And that's something that I think is unique in our, in our setup, you can kind of come drive all three or four cars in that segment and find out what you want. So focusing on the client, recognizing there's going to be some consolidation and really just focusing on operating a transparent business, I think will be what drives success, success moving forward. Those are our kind of focuses, right?
Are you are you looking to keep expanding the business regionally or like physical footprint or are you going to consolidate more? What are you thinking? You know, we're open to adding in all opportunities. Right now we're focused on the two rooftops we have. There's a couple, you know, other locations that are top of mind, but we're trying to just refocus and navigate this market and see what's going to happen. It's been an interesting road over the last year. And you know, we've seen in the last two months demand is coming back prices are normalizing. So I'm curious to see what fourth quarter looks like as we roll into, you know, an election year and how that impacts our business.
So dude, you're an artist, man. This is good stuff. Well, you definitely yeah, you're doing something that not many of us here in the, you know, the use card game are too in tune with. So it's pretty impressive. And I love your website. Very clean, very clean. Yeah, we try to make it, yeah, we took, I guess, influence and artistic cadre from high end websites where we like to shop, right? So we try to make it easy. There's not a lot of their fluff on there.
What you and your partner, like what's the relationship there? Like who does what or like what are you better at?
你和你的伴侣之间的关系是怎样的?像,你们各自负责什么,或者你们在哪方面更擅长?
What is he better at?
他在什么方面更擅长?
Yeah, you know, it's been interesting because having a good partner makes all the difference, right? So there's Chris is a great salesperson. He's wonderful a follow up. He's got a tenacity and the propensity to follow up for a client with a client for a decade before they buy a car. I'd like to think up to Nacias about that to Nacias.
So his his structure is really on the sales side that he helped and had our heavy hand on our marketing, especially out of the gate before we brought somebody on our team to do all that. And then, you know, kind of operationally and then on the vehicle acquisition side, that's that's why I focus.
So you're more the numbers and whatnot and make sense. For sure. He's not, but I get it.
所以你更喜欢数字和各种东西,并且有意义。当然。他不是,但我理解。
Yeah, that seems like a good partnership. Well, good stuff. Love to see what we're doing. And if anyone wants to learn more about tactical fleet yourself, where can they go?
Go to our Instagram, which is practical. We're a tactical fleet.com. I'm going to go to Instagram right now, actually. So it's good to know. We tried to keep the cards.
Well, thanks, Jason. And this has been fun. Like I said, we haven't delved into exotic cars and whatnot till now. So this has been great learning experience for me as well. It's truly like a sort of like an opaque part of our business. So super interesting.
Well, thanks for coming on, man. This was awesome. Talk to you. It's easy.
嗨,谢谢你来参加,伙计。这真是太棒了。跟你交谈很轻松。
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