More Bad News for Passenger Car Buyers

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Flat new vehicle sales and an industry that’s far more interested in making crossover lovers’ dreams come true add up to a poor environment for a traditional new car buyer.

We’ve already told you how high demand for a shrinking supply of off-lease sedans and hatchbacks has sent used car prices through the roof compared to just a few years ago. That erased a go-to option for many thrifty buyers. In the new car market, however, automakers’ need to boost profits in a stagnant market means incentive spending is dropping as fast as used car prices are rising.

It’s not just sedans that saw a decline in discounts last month.

Autodata figures for September, published by Automotive News, shows automakers increasingly turning off the taps. Not surprisingly, the decreased incentive spending disproportionately impacts small, cheaper vehicles that can’t soak up the discount in their generous margins.

Industry-wide, the average automaker incentive spend per vehicle in September was $3,791, a 2.7 percent drop from a year prior. Passenger cars saw the greatest statistical dip: a 7.8 percent year-over year decrease in spending (to $3,564), and a 3.2 percent drop over the first nine months of 2018.

Light trucks, on the other hand, still enjoy a year-to-date boost in incentives, but it’s a vanishing increase. While truck discounts are up 7.5 percent YTD, they fell 0.7 percent year over year in September. Average OEM cash on the hood was $3,892 last month.

Making the situation worse for new-car shoppers are rising interest rates and a trend towards greater credit standards, meaning buyers are more at risk for falling behind their car’s rate of depreciation while trying to pay off their pricier loan. That’s assuming they’re approved for the loan.

It’s not nearly the same market it was just a few years ago. Still, while the near future looks relatively tumultuous, you wouldn’t know it from looking at recent trade-ins. August data from Edmunds shows that 31 percent of trade-ins had negative equity — the lowest share recorded this year. The average amount owing that couldn’t be covered by the car’s value was $4,938, another 2018 low point.

[Image: Fiat Chrysler Automobiles]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • ABC-2000 ABC-2000 on Oct 23, 2018

    Anybody here used Honcker?

  • Sgtjmack Sgtjmack on Oct 23, 2018

    Hey, hey, hey wait a minute, pull the hand brake and spon around 180 deg. You are missing a huge factor in the rising used car prices. Several large storms have taken a crap ton of used cars out of the market is two ways. First, the storms themselves cleaned out the owners and the dealership lots, and then those same two needed to replace their vehicles. So you have to factor in that major account on top of the fact that someone made a ridiculous decision to remove or dramatically lower the amount of sedans,... reasonably priced sedans from their new line up. And as far as people buying more expensive cars, that is completely on them. No one is forcing them to pay the high prices instead of getting the lower trim level.

  • Jalop1991 Is this the beginning of the culmination of a very long game by Tesla?Build stuff, prove that it works. Sell the razors, sure, but pay close attention to the blades (charging network) that make the razors useful. Design features no one else is bothering with, and market the hell out of them.In other words, create demand for what you have.Then back out of manufacturing completely, because that's hard and expensive. License your stuff to legacy carmakers that (a) are able to build cars well, and (b) are too lazy to create the things and customer demand you did.Sit back and cash the checks.
  • Buickman more likely Dunfast.
  • Chris P Bacon "Dealership". Are these traditional franchised dealers, or is Vinfast selling direct?
  • Chris P Bacon Full self driving is a fraud. Even aircraft "autopilot" requires pilot interaction, attention, and most importantly of all, training is required. We've already seen accidents by idiots who think they don't need to interact with their Tesla. The system gets confused by simple lane markings, and there are many more variables driving down the street than there is in a jet aircraft.
  • ToolGuy I read through the Tesla presentation deck last night and here is my take (understanding that it was late and I ain't too bright):• Tesla has realized it has a capital outlay issue and has put the 'unboxed' process in new facilities on hold and will focus on a 'hybrid' approach cranking out more product from the existing facilities without as much cost reduction but saving on the capital.They still plan to go 'all the way' (maximum cost reduction) with the robo thing but that will be in the future when presumably more cash is freed up.
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