Boat-sale boon likely taxing in the end
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Alicia Robinson
Some vendors at the Lido Yacht Expo expect Thursday to be the day
they clean up.
Boat vendors expect brisk sales over the weekend -- especially on
Thursday, because shoppers may rush to buy a yacht before the state
law governing boat sales-tax exemptions changes.
Boat buyers can get an exemption from state sales tax if they make
their purchase offshore and keep their boat out of state for three
months. State legislators in July voted to extend the period that
boats must be kept out of state to one year, hoping that will
encourage more people to pay the sales tax. The change goes into
effect on Friday.
The 26th annual Lido show will include about 250 boats, about as
many as there were at the Newport Boat Show in April, said Duncan
McIntosh, who organizes both shows. But the Lido show will have more
new boats because 2005 models are starting to arrive on the West
Coast, he said.
“They’ll see more boats 40 feet and above than they’ll see at any
show on the West Coast, period,” McIntosh said.
To yacht brokers, the shows are important tools for getting people
in to see the boats. More and more people now browse for boats
online, but they tend to make a decision and a purchase faster at an
event with all the boats right there, said Bill King, president of
Crow’s Nest Compass Point Marine Group. His company has four West
Coast offices, including one in Newport Beach.
“We find it’s a good time for us to show customers a lot of
different products in a short period of time,” King said. “The
Internet has allowed people to go shop for boats without coming into
the dealerships or the brokerages like they used to.”
The Newport Boat Show racked up more than $60 million in retail
sales, McIntosh said. Business at the Lido show could get a boost, at
least on the first day, from the change in state law. People can
still claim the sales-tax exemption under the old, three-month rule
if they enter a binding contract for a boat by Friday.
“That’s going to stimulate the heck out of things,” Orange Coast
Yachts salesman Bob Gunderson said. “I, myself, and other people in
this office are working with clients that are bound and determined to
make a decision [by the deadline].”
But after the law goes into effect, some in the boat industry
think buyers will be driven away, and upgrade and repair services may
suffer as well.
“I think the biggest downside of that whole deal is that they’re
encouraging people to spend their money outside of the state,
McIntosh said. “They take the boat to Mexico ... and they go to the
boatyards down there and they spend money having their boats worked
on.”
It’s harder to serve existing clients when their boats are in
other countries for long periods of time, said Doug Levy, a salesman
at Phantom Marine in Newport Beach. Phantom Marine sells, installs
and repairs boat communication and navigation equipment.
“I would say we’re concerned,” he said. “It’s going to cost us
more money to service our clients.”
And while the end of the summer boating season is a great time for
a boat show, some think the industry has a saturation point. In the
spring, McIntosh’s boat show was followed by another large boat show
in Newport just two weeks later, and the Lido show was preceded last
weekend by a Southern California Marine Assn. boat show in Long
Beach.
Levy said some electronics dealers don’t bother much with the
shows anymore because it costs a bundle to participate, and they
don’t generate enough business to make it worthwhile.
“They used to be a boost for business, but they have so many of
them now, there’s no urgency to buy anything at the shows,” he said.
The Lido Yacht Expo is scheduled for Thursday through Sunday at
Lido Marina Village in Newport Beach.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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