Classic cars gain value as interest from Chinese and millennial investors grows
More classic cars are being imported and snapped up by collectors
Hong Kong’s fashionistas are already debating what to wear at Sino Group’s Gold Coast Motor Festival 2017, on November 10 to 12. Lavishly promoted as “Hong Kong’s premier motor celebration”, the festival presents 80 classic and collectible cars at the property developer’s 2,000-residence, 453-room Hong Kong Gold Coast Hotel and Marina resort, outside Tuen Mun. The weekend event is also the best excuse yet to dress up in style and drink Champagne in one of China’s most opulent, Riviera-like settings.
Big fashion names are heading to Gold Coast, and in the knowledge that classic automotive design and atelier fashion have long gone hand in hand. Labels and luxury brands traditionally follow the world’s beautiful to the finest car events, from Chantilly to Goodwood, and Monterey to the Villa d’Este.
Now Hong Kong’s style leaders are about to gleam in the international automotive limelight. The Gold Coast Motor Festival cavalcades some of the world’s finest cars from marque museums and rarely seen private collections, “but also celebrates local fashion and lifestyle”, says local collector Carl Yuen, the festival’s honorary curator.
“We’ve seen many more classic cars being brought into Hong Kong,” says Yuen, who is also vice-chairman of the 600-member Classic Car Club of Hong Kong (CCCHK). “More enthusiasts are buying, collecting and, best of all, driving their classic cars too,” he says, citing but not naming “local celebrities”.