Well said and I agree. I think the other factor here is that there was a relatively long lull where there were no cars for sale. Then all of a sudden a bunch of them sell in a short period, all of course feeding off each other.
1002, 1006, and 1043 all sold privately and had little/no impact on market values. No one was surprised by 1038, but then we were all taken aback by the price of 1041. So we keep waiting to see what the next one goes for, and the buyers are getting nervous, bidding high, worried that they'll miss an opportunity as the prices continue to rise, at the same time artificially raising the prices themselves (1049, 1045, 1010). I won't even mention the convertible.
It all stinks to me of the housing bubble (minus the subprime lending). 1010 is the 1,000 sq ft house with the 1/4 acre lot that's close to the trendy downtown area. Knock it down and build a McMansion, and then see where you're at in 5 years when the market adjusts.
I'll tell you what - if I owned 1006, 1017, 1043 or 1049 (what are arguably the best restored Tuckers right now), I'd sell them for $3 million today and buy them back in a couple years for $800K.
No one's paying $250K for Boss 429s or $500 for Hemi Cuda's anymore.
I can totally see what must be going through Deb Hull's mind right now...

Don't sell, Deb.