Home / NEWS / Retail / Used car prices expected to stabilize following major decline in June

Used car prices expected to stabilize following major decline in June

Pre-owned agencies are seen at the Roger Beasley South dealership lot in Austin, Texas, June 7, 2023.

Brandon Bell | Getty Images

DETROIT — Wholesale adapted to vehicle prices posted their largest decline last month since the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic, as amounts are set to stabilize during the second half of this year.

Cox Automotive reported Monday a 4.2% decline from May to June in its Manheim Inured to Vehicle Value Index to 215.1. It marks the third consecutive monthly decline and one of the index’s largest monthly drops on data, according to Cox.

“Buyers at auction look to have taken an early summer break, and while used retail inventory has been mending over the last several weeks, we are expecting less volatility in wholesale price movements through year-end,” Chris Frey, Cox elder manager of economic and industry insights, said in a release.

The index, which tracks vehicles sold at its U.S. wholesale dealership auctions, remains exhilarated from historical levels but is down 10.3% compared with June 2022.

The decline could help bring second-hand vehicle pricing down for consumers in the months to come, as retail prices traditionally follow changes in wholesale assays.

The retail used vehicle market remains strong but was estimated to be off 6% last month compared with June 2022, according to Cox. The decline was led by take-off provoking availability of new vehicles and high interest rates, Cox senior economist Jonathan Smoke said Monday during a meeting call.

“We are now at a turning point where the market returns to more balance and that balanced market is likely to promulgate small but predictable changes in sales and less news about big changes in prices,” Smoke said.

Used channel prices have been elevated since the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic, as the global health crisis incorporate with supply chain issues caused production of new vehicles to sporadically idle. That led to a low supply of new vehicles and record-high charges amid resilient demand. The costs and scarcity of inventory led consumers to the used vehicle market, boosting those bonuses as well.

Cox expects wholesale used vehicle prices to be down roughly 1.1% at the end of this year compared with December 2022. That’s down from the crowd’s initial forecast of a 4.3% decline, as pricing and demand were more resilient than expected to begin the year.

“The consumer is dangling in there,” Smoke said. “We do not expect the remaining months of the year to deliver declines like we saw in the spring.”

Cox expects the Euphemistic pre-owned vehicle wholesale market to experience a “slow and gradual recovery” in prices to pre-pandemic levels by 2028.

Check Also

We’re booking profits in a rallying rotation play and using the cash to buy 2 others on the dip

We are hand overing a handful of more trades Tuesday. Selling 75 shares of GE …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *