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#Used cars sales, prices rev up as strapped consumers look for bargains

Used cars sales, prices rev up as strapped consumers look for bargains

At the height of the coronavirus pandemic in mid-April, used-car dealer Alex Tovstanovsky had vehicles jammed six rows deep on his lot in the western Chicago suburb of Naperville.

But the seeming oversupply was not a mistake.

Despite plummeting sales at his store, Prestige Motor Works, Tovstanovsky was betting on a recovery, buying dozens of cars in early April as auction prices for used vehicles dropped.

That bet is now paying off. Tovstanovsky can offer cars cheaper than local competitors and his sales jumped 38 percent in May from the year-ago period.

“This is an election year and I felt the Trump administration and the Republicans in Congress would do whatever it took to keep the economy strong,” Tovstanovsky said.

Rising demand has now pushed used-vehicle prices about 20 percent higher than when Tovstanovsky made his bet.

“I just wish I’d bought more cars when prices were low,” Tovstanovsky said.

As America shut down in March to combat the spread of COVID-19 and its economy tanked, US new-vehicle sales plummeted. Sales were down around 30 percent in May, an improvement from a 47 percent drop in April.

But used-vehicle sales have rebounded faster.

Dealers are now competing to buy vehicles, even as the US economic outlook remains uncertain.

“We actually have an issue now, which is that we don’t have enough inventory,” said George Arison, co-CEO of online used-car seller Shift. Shift’s sales rebounded to pre-COVID-19 levels by late April.

Americans typically become more frugal and favor used cars in uncertain times. Cars remain a vital commodity in a country where getting to work without a vehicle is impossible in all but a few large cities

Rising used-car sales increase competition for automakers who must sell new cars to offset cash burned during a two-month shutdown for the North American auto industry.

According to Cox Automotive, new-vehicle sales for the week ending May 28 were down 28 percent, but sales of used vehicles were up 6 percent.

According to Cox unit Manheim, wholesale used-vehicle prices rose 5.74 percent in the first half of May from the previous month.

Carmax, the No. 1 used-car dealer, has already called back about two-thirds of the 15,500 employees it furloughed in April.

“We expect to come out of this in a position to take advantage of the resiliency of the used-car industry,” said chief marketing officer Jim Lyski.

While dealers say access to financing is plentiful, Wells Fargo said this week it will stop offering loans to most independent dealers due to economic uncertainty.

Used-car dealers say recent customers have ranged from deep subprime borrowers using their $1,200 federal pandemic relief checks for a down payment, to prime borrowers with pristine credit who saved money working from home since March.

“I’ve seen a lot of down payments this month of exactly $1,200,” said Scott Allen, owner of Auto Land in Fort Worth, Texas, which sells older used vehicles. After being closed for nearly a month from March 23, Allen’s sales in May were up 55 percent over his average for that month.

The US used-vehicle market has distinct layers. At the top, in terms of price, are vehicles returned after short-term leases that look nearly new. Those are a concern for the industry.

More than 4 million off-lease vehicles are due to return to the market this year, at a rate of around 340,000 per month.

Automakers and their finance arms are trying to slow the pace at which those vehicles hit auctions to avoid flooding the market.

KAR Auction Services has bought 200 acres of land and is seeking another 100 acres to store cars for major customers.

Tom Kontos, chief economist at KAR, which alongside Manheim dominates the US used-car auction market, calls these vehicles “melting ice cubes.” They lose value every day, and cannot be held back for long.

Franchise new-car dealers are driving demand for used cars to fill lots short of inventory because the coronavirus shut down assembly plants.

Ten of the top 15 models sold at US franchise dealers were used rather than new from May 22 to May 28, according to automotive marketing platform PureCars.

Source

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