Houston Chronicle Sunday

Sticker shock: Used car market is ‘bananas’ over shortage

- By Jeanne Whalen

LAWRENCEVI­LLE, N.J. — The 2019 Honda Civic that kicked off a used-car auction earlier this month would have been nothing special before the pandemic. But as automotive dealer Brad Wimmer watched, the online bidding quickly became, to quote him, “bananas.”

As a new car, the Civic would have had a sticker price of around $21,000. But within seconds at the wholesale auction, the 2-year-old model, with 4,000 miles, sold for $27,200.

Soon after, a Nissan Rogue fetched what it would have cost new in 2018. A 3-year old Toyota Camry with large dents and scratches on its hood sold for $14,200, nearly twice what it would have brought just a few years ago. And a 2015 Kia Sorento sold for $12,600, a staggering amount for a 6year-old car with 83,000 miles.

For Wimmer, owner of the dealer AutoLender­s, such sky-high prices have become the norm at the weekly auction, where dealership­s nationwide buy and sell used cars.

The unraveling of the used-car market is the most tangible result of a problem that has plagued the global economy for the past year: a dire shortage of computer chips that has hobbled auto manufactur­ing. The crisis has created a political headache for the Biden administra­tion as inflation fears surge, and troubles for consumers as they realize that the used-car market is no longer a low-price option.

“It’s going to be really, really tough for consumers to buy a vehicle in

2022 … you’re going to have to pay a very high sticker price,” Wimmer said as he watched the auction, which used to attract more than 1,000 car dealers to Manheim, Pa., every week but since the pandemic mostly operates online.

Demand for chips, also known as semiconduc­tors, is soaring as more electronic products require the components to function. The pandemic accelerate­d demand as consumers gobbled up new computers and household goods. But chip supply is limited by a lack of semiconduc­tor factories and by the monthslong process needed to make the components.

That’s forced automakers worldwide to slash production because they can’t get enough chips to power all the newest technology in their cars. The global auto industry will produce nearly 4 million fewer vehicles than planned this year because of the shortages, according to the consulting firm AlixPartne­rs. By July, only 1.2 million new cars were on U.S. dealers’ lots, down from 3.5 million before the pandemic, according to data provider Cox Automotive.

With far fewer new cars hitting the market, consumer prices for used cars have soared by more than 24 percent in the United States over the past year, while new-car prices are up nearly 9 percent, according to the Labor Department.

Those jumps have also fueled eye-popping prices for rental cars, and helped push U.S. inflation to a 13-year high of 5.4 percent.

Poorer households are especially likely to feel the burden of pricier used cars, said Michael Hicks, an economics professor at Ball State University in Muncie, Ind. They often own older cars more apt to break down, but will struggle to replace them at current prices, he said.

If high prices continue, they could also become a drag on employment. “If this is still a story in October 2022, there could be a number of people finding it difficult to get to work because they can’t find the automobile­s they need,” Hicks said.

The pricing frenzy has made for a “grueling” car search, Elvalynne Pala said while collecting a

2018 Honda CRV from the AutoLender­s dealership where Wimmer watched the auction.

“If you don’t get the car immediatel­y, somebody’s buying it right out from under you,” said Pala, a resident of nearby Bucks County, Pa. “I almost had the problem with this car. And it just seems like people are buying without even seeing the vehicles.”

She spent about

$27,000 on her SUV, which has 23,000 miles on it. That was a few thousand dollars over her budget, but the best deal she could find after weeks of looking on CarMax and CarGurus, she said.

Another customer arriving to peruse models, Gunjan Mukheja, said she began searching last month, after her car was totaled in an accident.

“I entered this car market like, oh my God, this is worse than the house market,” she said. “It is crazy, so crazy.”

 ?? Michelle Gustafson / Washington Post contributo­r ?? An AutoLender­s dealership in Lawrencevi­lle, N.J. Prices for used cars have soared over the past year.
Michelle Gustafson / Washington Post contributo­r An AutoLender­s dealership in Lawrencevi­lle, N.J. Prices for used cars have soared over the past year.

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