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View Full Version : $10M Personalised plate - what the heck ?



VladTepes
26th August 2013, 08:59 AM
:eek:



A UK businessman has turned down an offer of more than £6 million ($10.44 million) for his 'F1' registration plate.
Afzal Kahn has spent hundreds of thousands of pounds building up one of Britain’s most impressive private plate collections. And the most desirable of the registrations is his beloved 'F1', which currently sits on the front of his Bugatti Veyron (http://www.carsguide.com.au/news-and-reviews/car-news/bugatti_veyron_to_get_six_new_special_editions) supercar.
http://www.carsguide.com.au/images/uploads/Gallery-f1numberplate.jpg (http://www.carsguide.com.au/pics/$10-million-offer-for-number-plate/5246/0/78126/)








The entrepreneur caused a stir when, in 2008, he paid a staggering £440,000 ($765,300) for the cherished plate -- a British record. But it’s proven to be a savvy investment with the plate’s value increasing by more than ten times after one ultra-rich individual offered £6million for it.
Drivers in the United Arab Emirates are even more fanatical about personal registrations. The single digit ‘1’ sold in February 2008, for £7.25 million ($12.61m) , reportedly to Abu Dhabi businessman Saeed Khouri, then 25.
Personal plates can be a good investment, if you make the right choice. VIP 1, which originally belonged to Pope John Paul II’s Popemobile, was bought for £62,000 ($107,840) in 2004 – two years later Roman Abramovich bought it for £285,000 ($495,730).
However, Mr Kahn, who runs A Kahn Design in Bradford, rejected the offer believing it is worth considerably more. Indeed, he has no pressing need for new cars, with our pictures also showing him posing with the plate attached to his Mercedes SLR McLaren. Mr Khan's refusal to sell the plate means that he still likely holds the record for spending the most money on a UK registration plate.
A spokesman for Mr Khan's company said: 'We have received a significant multi-million pound offer for the F1 plate which we rejected out of hand. Mr Kahn has no interest in selling F1, which is his favourite plate. Cherished number plates, unlike property or other investments tend not to fluctuate in value, they only go up. It really shouldn’t be a shock to people that the number plate is worth millions of pounds.'
The 109-year-old registration was on a modest Volvo S80 (http://www.carsguide.com.au/news-and-reviews/car-reviews-road-tests/volvo_s80_test_drive) when Kahn bought the plate in 2008. It was used by the chairman of Essex County Council with the local authority using the funds from the sale to raise money for a charity which aimed to raise the standards for young drivers. 'F1' now makes up part of Mr Kahn’s impressive plate collection which includes the registrations ‘4HRH’ and ‘NO1’.


Hmmm.

Ferret
26th August 2013, 10:34 AM
After spending $10m for your new rego plate you would probably need to fork out another $10m on a surveillance rock to make sure no one nicks it from your McLaren whilst parked in the driveway.

I'm sure anybody who thinks $10m represents great value for a number plate would jump at the chance to buy a Maxwell Smart rock.

eBay: Surveillance Rock (http://www.ebay.com/itm/Prototype-Hardware-from-Lockheed-Martin-Surveillance-Project-/221272094476)

Mick_Marsh
26th August 2013, 03:40 PM
Stuff the plate, I'll take the car.