USA TODAY International Edition

New-car price increases may slow

More discounts available amid SUV glut

- Nathan Bomey

Sticker prices on new vehicles are approachin­g $40,000 as the nation’s SUV craze continues.

But relief may finally be in sight. A confluence of factors, from a glut of SUVs to increasing discounts and the slowing market for new vehicles, may be poised to slow the ascent of prices.

That doesn’t mean new cars suddenly will be cheap. But prices are no longer on an unstoppabl­e upward climb.

Discounts are rising

Automakers offered 2,923 deal packages in July, up 27% from a year earlier and up 9.7% from a month earlier, according to Cox Automotive.

While the average sticker price of a new vehicle reached $39,500 in the first half of 2019, you won’t necessaril­y have to pay that price. In July, Americans paid an average of $37,030 for a new vehicle when discounts were factored in, according to car-buying advice site Edmunds.

GM boosted incentives by $740 per vehicle in July, compared with a year earlier, as it “heavily discounted” crossovers such as the Buick Enclave and Chevrolet Traverse, according to Deutsche Bank analyst Emmanuel Rosner. Ford increased incentives by $330.

Many of the industry deals are targeted, often down to the vehicle identification number or particular option package, according to Cox Automotive.

Dealers under pressure to sell this year’s models

At this time of year, dealers are supposed to be transition­ing to next year’s models. But this year, they’re behind.

That means they’ll be increasing­ly desperate to offload last year’s vehicles.

In July, 90% of vehicles on dealer lots were from the 2019 model year, the highest percentage in at least 10 years, according to Edmunds.

Meanwhile, only 7% of vehicles for sale in July were next year’s models, the lowest level in at least 10 years, according to Edmunds.

SUV competitio­n is heating up

For years, all you needed to do to sell an SUV was to make an SUV. That’s not the case anymore.

To be sure, SUVs are largely responsibl­e for the auto industry’s overall price increases. But in the second quarter, 71% of vehicle sales were SUVs, crossovers and pickups.

“Within the SUV segment, you’re definitely seeing more deals than if we had this conversati­on a year or two ago,” said Jessica Caldwell, analyst at Edmunds.

Look no further than Nissan, which has heavy discounts on the Rogue (more than $4,000) and Murano (nearly $7,000) SUVs despite a corporate plan to reduce incentives to bolster profits, said Kelsey Mays, senior consumer affairs editor of Cars.com.

Sales are falling

Rosner projected Thursday that U.S. new-vehicle sales will total 16.7 million for 2019.

While still relatively healthy, that would be down about 500,000 from 2018.

And automakers are focusing on less-profitable sales to fleet customers, like rental-car companies.

“We worry the industry’s growing dependence on fleet sales” could weigh on the industry “after daily rental fleets are refreshed or if business confidence starts to deteriorat­e,” Rosner wrote in a research note.

90% of vehicles on dealer lots were from the 2019 model year, the highest percentage in at least 10 years, according to Edmunds.

 ?? ANDREW WEBER/AP ?? Nissan has heavy discounts on the Rogue, above (more than $4,000).
ANDREW WEBER/AP Nissan has heavy discounts on the Rogue, above (more than $4,000).

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