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Porsche is looking at ways to stop people from looking at its cars as if they are merely opportunities to make a quick profit. This is especially true when it comes to the company’s limited-run models that seem to pop up rather quickly on the second-hand market with ludicrously high price tags. But all these resellers might be out of a job soon if Porsche goes through with its idea to include some sort of lease plan for special models that would inhibit owners from selling their cars for a certain period of time.
By looking at the numbers, you’d think that Porsche has it all figured out. The luxury and performance brand from Stuttgart, Germany, sold no less than 57,202 cars in the U.S. alone over the 12 months of 2018. This was an increase of 3.2% from 2017 which, in itself, was a record year. In fact, 2018 was the ninth consecutive year of growth for PCNA and the seventh record year in a row for Porsche Cars North America. But Porsche still has niggly little things it needs to sort out and one of them, in particular, is the matter of its special edition models emerging way too quickly with fishy price markups in place on the used car market.
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