“Owners with long term amortizations have really painted themselves in the corner….. model of the 20-30 yr amortizations dies when real estate values collapse.” “Now they own an unprofitable wash and can't find a buyer that will pay the mortgage balance.”
If someone is upside down with loan for used car, the causes can be buyer paid too much for the car in the first place, bought a car beyond their means or didn’t buy gap insurance, etc. Being upside down has more reasons than condition of used car market or borrowed to buy.
Likewise, mortgage or collapse of RE market does not necessarily cause someone to become upside down with a carwash.
“people who lost their assets on the court house steps”…. and “their anguish and grief.”
I’d bet many of these folks borrowed on pro forma rather than a rigorous evaluation of market, business model, technical, management, economic and financial and exit strategy viability.
No one holds a gun to someone’s head that gets into this business.
“In my opinion, a SS/automatic car wash is a liability, not an investment.”
SS/IBA is also a business.
Business risk involves competition and operations; will the site produce sufficient sales and can management provide an effective operation.
Investment risk involves RE development risks which include, among other things, re-sale market risk – will future conditions allow sale to a 3rd party for expected price.
Business and investment risks are quite different but related. You need to cover both adequately to minimize risk of failure.
If this is over the head of folks who became upside down and failed, they likely had no business in carwash or any business for that matter.
“The only ray of hope I see is the pay-one-price concept unfolding in Florida.”
POP is not a bankrupt idea because it is showing to work and it can make sense mathematically.
However, like anything, the proponents say there are certain criteria should be met and, like always but not mentioned, there are consequences for actions.
Consider an area with four SS/IBA businesses with potential market of $100 in wash revenue.
Each wash has 25% market share or $25 annually. Here comes a recession which causes consumer spending to drop 40% which causes the total carwash market to drop to $60. So, each carwash business now has $15 annual wash revenue instead of $25.
Wash A says, forget you guys, I’m going POP. Doing so, Wash A results are wash revenue of $25 annually. This means the three other washes get to divvy up $35 ($60 - $25) or $11.67 annually.
By Wash A going to POP, the other three washes saw their annual wash revenue drop by another $3.33 ($15 - $11.67).
You can’t simply overcome logic, physics or math with BS.
POP (wash all you want) and $3.00 express free vacuums is simply price competition. If carwash owners tend to herd consumers toward lowest price, the market ultimately becomes lowest price.