Podcast: The Truth About the Market
Host: Jason Zilberbrand, President of VREF

Everyone is looking at charts right now.

Asking prices.
Inventory counts.
Scraped listing data.
AI-generated market summaries.

And most of them are missing the same thing.

The market is moving.

It is just not moving where they are looking.

In this episode of The Truth About the Market, Jason breaks down why aircraft markets rarely reveal stress through public pricing first.

They reveal it through behavior: slower calls, longer negotiations, wider gaps between asking and closing prices, failed pre-buys, tighter financing, restrictive insurance, and deals that quietly die before anyone reports them.

Because aviation is not a transparent market.

There is no MLS.

There is no clean public record of every transaction.

There is no chart that captures concessions, failed deals, maintenance exposure, financing friction, or buyer hesitation.

And that is exactly why scraped listing data can look convincing while still missing the real market.

In this episode, Jason covers:

  • Why aviation markets speak through behavior before they speak through price
  • Why asking prices can create the illusion of stability while liquidity deteriorates underneath
  • How aircraft owners, brokers, and lenders resist admitting market change for as long as possible
  • Why frozen markets can look healthy to outsiders staring at listings online
  • How the spread between asking price and actual closing price is widening
  • Why failed pre-buys, underwriting friction, and stalled negotiations often reveal more than closed transactions
  • How scraped listings create polished distortions when treated as complete market intelligence
  • Why public asking prices are marketing tools, not verified market conclusions
  • Why aviation has no true MLS system, and why that matters for valuation
  • How concessions, maintenance findings, financing issues, insurance limits, and failed deals remain invisible in public data
  • Why a regression model built on incomplete listings can look sophisticated and still be wrong
  • Why real price discovery happens in lender reviews, insurance underwriting, maintenance evaluations, and private negotiations
  • How aviation markets freeze before they visibly correct
  • Why buyers price forward while sellers stay anchored to old comps
  • How liquidity is confidence made visible
  • Why transaction velocity matters more than advertised pricing during market transitions
  • Why older, unsupported, high-maintenance, or avionics-limited aircraft may separate from the fleet first
  • Why insurance and financing are becoming gatekeepers for aircraft marketability
  • Why broad averages hide the most important story in a segmented aviation market

Jason also explains why the future of aircraft value will increasingly depend on survivability, supportability, and long-term economic relevance.

Not just age.
Not just total time.
Not just asking price.
Not just a chart.

Because aircraft are not commodities moving through a perfectly transparent exchange.

They are individualized capital assets with unique histories, risks, maintenance profiles, financing constraints, insurance realities, buyer psychology, and seller pressure.

The bottom line:

The aircraft market is moving.

But the first signs are not showing up in scraped listings or polished dashboards.

They are showing up in behavior.

Slower transactions.
Wider spreads.
More hesitation.
Tighter capital.
Stricter insurance.
Selective buyers.
Deals that never close.

By the time public data finally catches up, the real market has usually already moved.

For accurate, defensible aircraft valuations trusted by lenders, insurers, and aviation professionals worldwide, subscribe to VREF Online.

Fly safe. Stay smart.