Local brokerage business seems to have evolved into a two-level market. The Roomy Interior late model "condo's with a mast" are selling well IF they are
Clean. Lots of new sailors in the market are attracted to them, but cannot find a new boat without a long wait.
More traditional Sailing boats take longer to sell, and I suspect that that will comprise a slowly declining part of the market going forward. The days when companies like Catalina, San Juan, Ranger, and others were priming the pump with oodles new 20 to 22' sailboats sold to young families are now just a nice memory. Those young families moved up and now we are slowly cruising into retirement... And our local one design racing is now doing sort of OK, but is comprised of aging fleets of Ranger 20's, Catalina 22's, Merit 25's, Martin 24's, and some J-24's. Not too many folks out racing without showing some gray hair.
Not much help for it tho... the survivors in the mass production boat business are just living/profiting by a sort of nautical "Gresham's Law". And then, there are a still a lot of surviving hulls from the 80's and 90's with "good bones" that can be restored to New by anyone who wants both speed and quality.
That's why we opted for a full re-fit last year, and spend way under half what a new equivalent boat would have cost us. But we are in a very small part of the market.

Microscopic, at the most.....
Things are going to get more weird too. I know of owners with 25 year old cheap-built boats that are feeling depressed by the work & money required to maintain boats that were never designed or built to last barely
this long.
The next decade should be interesting... !

