Posted on 05/07/2022 2:08:33 PM PDT by blam
It’s been a challenging year for consumers. And with the highest inflation in four decades, some are paring back spending on big-ticket items, such as used automobiles. After jumping 90%, since the start of the virus pandemic, used car prices are cooling as buyers balk due to affordability issues stemming from soaring interest rates.
Outside of the COVID shock and Great Financial Crisis of 2008/09, the Manheim Used Vehicle Value Index, a wholesale tracker of used car prices, printed the most significant monthly decline in terms of rate of change averaged out over three months in April at 6.4%. It didn’t beat the April 2020 print of -11.2% nor December 2008 of -11.5%, but those two periods were in full-blown financial crises.
Currently, the Federal Reserve and the Biden administration reassure everyone the economy is strong, and there’s nothing to worry about. The Fed routinely says monetary tightening will create a soft-landing, similar to the mid-90s. However, tightening financial conditions could only spark trouble for an economy based 70% on consumption and driven by access to cheap credit.
The cooling in the used car market could suggest a broader economic slowdown is ahead.
Take a look at the used car market year-over-year growth rates versus used car auto loan rates. A jump in rates has dampened upward price pressure as fewer buyers can afford cars.
The rate surge was evident in April as used car sales slowed down precipitously, down 13% compared with March.
Though the Used Car Index tracks *wholesale pricing*
Manheim estimates that *retail used car sales* declined 13% MoM in April.
Time will tell how this will unfold
but I will be sure to keep you posted on what I’m seeing on the ground floor.
— CarDealershipGuy (@GuyDealership) May 6, 2022
Readers may recall the first used car price stall warning printed in early February. In a piece titled “Used Car Prices Arrive At Yet Another Major Inflection Point,” it was evident that the loss in momentum in used car prices was a grave concern. By mid-March, used car prices slid some more as supply chain congestion peaked and was believed to soon increase the supply of new cars. Then by early April, used car prices continued to slump as we asked the question: “Are Used Car Prices About To Peak For Real This Time?”
Some have pointed out that used car prices via the CarGurus index have already rebounded and suggest Manheim could be a laggard indicator.
CarGurus index shows dip and recovery, what does that mean compared to auction prices? Is Manheim lagging? pic.twitter.com/V3qWFE4mp6
— sixdee9er (@sixD9er) May 6, 2022
However, those in the industry have more confidence in Manheim than CarGurus.
I don’t trust this index.
Manheim has *actual* sales data.
Cargurus only tracks listing prices (which we all know are not accurate)
— CarDealershipGuy (@GuyDealership) May 6, 2022
Consumers have likely tightened their belts in early May. This comes as the Fed is cooling off hot inflation. New and used vehicles account for 9.2% of consumer prices. And if the Fed wants to find the neutral rate by the midterms, interest rates will go higher and inflict more downward pressure on used car prices, thus helping to extinguish the inflation fire it sparked two years ago by printing trillions of dollars.
I think next year will work for me if they continue to fall. But my 2003 Buick Century is still going.
I think inflation is forcing people to follow the Cuban lead over the past seventy years. Invest your money in the junk yard used car parts market.
Just yesterday, had a local dealer offer me 20K for my 2014 Buick Regal GS with 53K =/- miles on it, so not sure on the “cooling” bit.
I was just looking at some cars at texasdirectauto.com yesterday and it seemed to me the prices were not as crazy as months ago.
it would be cool to build an entire 1955 chevy from reproduction parts.
I drive my 1993 Ford Ranger every day while my newer truck sits.
It didn’t beat the April 2020 print of -11.2% nor December 2008 of -11.5%, but those two periods were in full-blown financial crises.
***You mean to tell me that the authors do not acknowledge we are in a full-blown financial crisis RIGHT NOW?
The higher the death rate the more used cars on the market.
Probably because people aren’t buying them...
“But my 2003 Buick Century is still going.”
So is our 2000 Suburban. Only major repairs were rebuilding the differential and replacing the air conditioner.
My 2001 Buick Century is awesome. Bought it from my dear aged Aunt for 3,800 bucks when it had 45K miles. I will drive it for the rest of my life (or until I die or it starts costing me more than 1K/year to operate, whichever comes first).
I just did that very thing - picked up a “running core” engine for my pickup. It was the only one around, so I thought I should grab it now.
I’m planning to do a performance build, but at very least I have a spare.
I’m 78....have more miles on me than my car...which has 75000
I doubt the whole thing could be measured by amateur web sleuths, but I’d bet a portion of the demand curve going down is related to teenagers and young adults, who would normally be starting out in life and looking for those used cars, being so conditioned from the last two years of denied young adulthood experiences, just abandoning that portion of their lives and staying at home and living on their computers and video game screens instead.
The perverse incentives and largely undiscovered mental health crisis of the past two years are going to break a lot of assumptions that economists have about how people behave.
EXACTLY what went through my mind as soon as I read that line.
59 here, but I predict my 2001 century. Currently 87k, will outlive me!
Filling em up ain't easy either these days.
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