Chicago Sun-Times

Used-car prices spiking as COVID-19 pandemic shakes up the market for new cars

- BY NATHAN BOMEY

If you were hoping to find some savings during the COVID-19 pandemic, you won’t find them in the used-car market, unfortunat­ely.

Then again, you might be able to make a few bucks if you’re willing to part with a vehicle because used-car prices are spiking due to an unusual confluence of factors during the pandemic.

The reasons?

Among them are that buyers are flooding the used-car market, looking for deals amid high prices for new vehicles, getting low interest rates and seeing a shortage of new-vehicle inventory, according to carresearc­h site Edmunds.

The average listing price of used vehicles was $21,558 in July, up $708 from June.

“This is an unpreceden­ted historical shift in the used vehicle market, where listing prices typically decrease during this time period due to depreciati­on,” Edmunds said recently.

Any hope the rentalcar company

Hertz’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing this year would cause a drop in used-car prices has diminished due to the overwhelmi­ng influence of COVID-19 on the market.

Ivan Drury, Edmunds’ senior manager of insights, said in a statement that there’s “significan­tly increased demand” for used vehicles, in part due to rock-bottom interest rates.

Also, automakers were forced to shut down plants for about two months in the spring due to work restrictio­ns because of COVID-19. That led to a decline in new-vehicle inventory and a delay in 2021 models.

“It’s a seller’s market right now,” Drury said. “Although used vehicles continue to offer significan­t discounts compared to new, used-car shoppers will find themselves in the unusual position where they might not have as much negotiatio­n power because demand is so high and dealers will be less inclined to be flexible.”

Drury advises buyers to be prepared to act quickly if they see a used car they want.

The price increases are especially sharp for larger vehicles, which are in high demand.

Used large pickups, for example, saw a $2,301 increase in average list price in July, hitting $33,264, according to Edmunds. Midsize trucks recorded a $1,812 increase to $29,457.

“Used-car prices are still at recordbrea­king levels, and in some segments, there are models coming close to new-car prices, including sports cars,” car-valuation service Kelley Blue Book reported August 3.

That said, new-car prices still carry a premium for the most part.

The average price of a new vehicle sold in July was $38,378, up 2% from a year earlier but down 1.2% from June, according to Kelley Blue Book.

Average July used-car list prices, by vehicle segment, ranked by price change (with the increase from June in parenthese­s):

• Large pickup: $33,264 (up $2,301)

• Midsize truck: $29,457 (up $1,812)

• Sports car: $24,867 (up $1,369)

• Large SUV: $37,942 (up $1,094)

• Large car: $22,446 (up $1,060)

• Subcompact car: $13,214 (up $841)

• Midsize SUV: $24,766 (up $803)

• Midsize car: $16,709 (up $520)

• Subcompact SUV: $17,169 (up $516)

• Compact SUV: $18,949 (up $512)

• Heavy-duty pickup: $43,044 (up $491) • Compact car: $14,859 (up $427)

• Minivan: $21,727 (up $415)

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