I completely agree with Carguy! that 90% are still on the road.
I think 65%-70% is way too low, here's the quik'n'dirty explanation of why if anyone's interested.
-Assume the weighted average age of all NSXs is 10 years old.
-Assume that the average value all NSXs is about $45K at the time they were totalled.
If 30% (or 2400) of the NSXs have been crashed or stolen then the payout by the insurance companies would have been 2400 * $45K. This equals $108 million.
For the insurance companies to break even on collision insurance (not liability), they'd have needed to collect $108 million in collision insurance payments. There have been approximately 8000 * 10 (from the assumption above) years of NSX collision premiums paid. This equals 80,000 years of premiums. To recover the 108 million that they would have had to pay out for 2400 totalled NSXs, the average annual collision premium for an NSX would have to be $108,000,000 / 80,000 which equals $1350. This seems extremely high to me. This amount doesn't include the administrative or profit components for the insurance companies. I think <$500 would be more accurate, so I'd go with Carguy's! estimate of over 90% still around.
I think 65%-70% is way too low, here's the quik'n'dirty explanation of why if anyone's interested.
-Assume the weighted average age of all NSXs is 10 years old.
-Assume that the average value all NSXs is about $45K at the time they were totalled.
If 30% (or 2400) of the NSXs have been crashed or stolen then the payout by the insurance companies would have been 2400 * $45K. This equals $108 million.
For the insurance companies to break even on collision insurance (not liability), they'd have needed to collect $108 million in collision insurance payments. There have been approximately 8000 * 10 (from the assumption above) years of NSX collision premiums paid. This equals 80,000 years of premiums. To recover the 108 million that they would have had to pay out for 2400 totalled NSXs, the average annual collision premium for an NSX would have to be $108,000,000 / 80,000 which equals $1350. This seems extremely high to me. This amount doesn't include the administrative or profit components for the insurance companies. I think <$500 would be more accurate, so I'd go with Carguy's! estimate of over 90% still around.