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        <title><![CDATA[Used cars sales, prices rev up as strapped consumers look for bargains]]></title>
        <atom:link href="https://usagag.com/2020/06/05/used-cars-sales-prices-rev-up-as-strapped-consumers-look-for-bargains/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
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            <media:title type="html">Used cars sales, prices rev up as strapped consumers look for bargains</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>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.</p><p>But the seeming oversupply was not a mistake.</p><p>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.</p><p>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.</p><p>“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.</p><p>Rising demand has now pushed used-vehicle prices about 20 percent higher than when Tovstanovsky made his bet.</p><p>“I just wish I’d bought more cars when prices were low,” Tovstanovsky said.</p><p>As America shut down in March to combat the spread of COVID-19 and its economy tanked, <strong>US new-vehicle sales plummeted</strong>. Sales were down around 30 percent in May, an improvement from a 47 percent drop in April.</p><p>But used-vehicle sales have rebounded faster.</p><p>Dealers are now competing to buy vehicles, even as the US economic outlook remains uncertain.</p><p>“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.</p><p>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</p><p>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.</p><p>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.</p><p>According to Cox unit Manheim, wholesale used-vehicle prices rose 5.74 percent in the first half of May from the previous month.</p><p>Carmax, the No. 1 used-car dealer, has already called back about two-thirds of the 15,500 employees it furloughed in April.</p><p>“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.</p><p>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.</p><p>Used-car dealers say recent customers have ranged from deep subprime borrowers <strong>using their $1,200 federal pandemic relief checks</strong> for a down payment, to prime borrowers with pristine credit who saved money working from home since March.</p><p>“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.</p><p>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.</p><p>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.</p><p>Automakers and their finance arms are trying to slow the pace at which those vehicles hit auctions to avoid flooding the market.</p><p>KAR Auction Services has bought 200 acres of land and is seeking another 100 acres to store cars for major customers.</p><p>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.</p><p>Franchise new-car dealers are driving demand for used cars to fill lots short of inventory because the coronavirus <strong>shut down assembly plants</strong>.</p><p>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.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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