Carbuff, there has been lots of feedback on this subject so far, but no one mentioned it doesn't apply just to Corvettes. Some mentioned being forced to sign a No Resale Agreement. Some said they didn't. I would encourage those that don't recall signing a form to review their bills of sale under the section that covers Comments, restrictions, limitations and conditions. See if there are comments like "You agree NOT to sell or transfer ownership of this vehicle for a term of 12 months AND 12,000 km." "If so you agree to pay the dealer a sum of $___________." This statement is here to protect the dealer from future repercussions from GM.
Every dealer gets audited at some point. Dealer jackets which contain all the papers for a vehicle like bills of sale, GM Visa rebates,
manufacture rebates, OnStar papers etc. for all vehicles including demos are reviewed for accuracy. Mistakes result in fines to the
dealer by GM. In some cases big fines.
Dealers are required before selling a vehicle to anyone to check and make sure that person is not listed on the "Do Not Sell" Blacklist.
The people on this list are the known "Exporters" and they are placed on this list for life.
If a GM dealer sells to a person on this GM Blacklist they face repercussions from GM such as, full chargeback of all profits on the vehicle that was sold and later exported, (this includes all GM vehicles including Silverado, Escalades and diesel vehicles that are very popular for export) and additional fines. Dealers can also lose future allocation and are not supposed to charge over MSRP for a vehicle.
I know of a situation where a dealer this year was charged a $250,000 fine after selling vehicles that were exported.
To answer you question, if a person was to get sick, lose job or need to move to another country, selling dealers are asking customers to come back to them so they can assist with the sale of that vehicle if you choose not to take it with you.
The blacklist is to prevent the export for profit situation from happening as GM knows every car sent to Canada could be exported
for a profit given our exchange rates.
People have been added to the blacklist this year in Canada for selling their Corvettes and now will never be able to get another.
If your thinking about selling your vehicle in the first 6 months for a non Corvette or the first 12 months for your Corvette, I would encourage everyone to speak to their dealer about the situation if you are under 12,000 km to protect yourselves!