Right now, the only thing "worth" in doing so would be if you have a collector car which is considered highly collectible in Europe. Transport costs, EUR/UK equipment compliance, bonding and insurance make bringing a "regular" car over to Europe impractical, not to mention that most US cars are gas pigs at a time when Europe has incredibly high oil and tax prices, and is thus more interested in micro-cars. If you wish to bring over a car of your own design, and you intend to interest foreign investors, you might be able to write some of your expenses as deductible to your company. Otherwise, life could be pretty tough for a standard car being sold overseas...even the Ford Mustang isn't exported from Dearborn b/c of low mpg, so the manufacturers aren't keen on selling overseas...except to Asia, of course!!
To sell them as slaves.
they are you can sell them on eBay and i promise you will get a buyer for about $100
You can buy a Non-Personalized Cheque from a Bank. Europe's banks normally sell American Express or JP Morgan's cheques.
The coin is very common, circulated examples sell for $17.00-$26.00
Any pony-car such as a Mustang, Camaro, or Barracuda. Also any American two-door sedan with a big engine and lots of horsepower. Also most convertibles sell well.
iPod nano 1st gen brand new sell for about $95 American dollars
Europe was not wanting to sell, but import items into Europe. They wanted the spices, gunpowder, silks, perfumes that Asia had to offer.
Not worth it. Sell the bike as it is and buy the kind of bike you want instead.
It's where the more you sell the higher the percentage of your commission. Example: you sell hats. For the first $100 worth of hats you sell you receive 5% commission. For the next $200 worth of hats you sell you receive 7.5% commission and anything over $300 worth of hats that you sell you receive 10% commission. Incentive to sell sell sell.
Yes.
Yes they do.
Do they sell American beer in porto Rico