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  • A car is one of the biggest purchases a person will make in

  • their lifetime. But unlike a house, a car starts losing value

  • right away, literally as you drive it off the lot.

  • You could keep it spotless inside and out, give it regular

  • maintenance and protect it against every ding, dent and scratch and

  • it'll still lose value.

  • Depreciation. The rate at which that happens is one of those

  • numbers everyone in the automotive world thinks about.

  • Consumers, automakers and the massive used car market, which

  • makes up somewhere around 40 million sales each year, more than

  • double the sales of new cars.

  • But in 2020, something strange started happening, turning the car

  • market upside down.

  • Used vehicles were actually increasing for about two years,

  • which we've never seen anything like that for the for the market.

  • A lot of those trends have abated since, but those odd times led to

  • lasting changes in the post-pandemic world.

  • There are fewer cars to go around, and prices for both new and used

  • vehicles are still high.

  • That is unlikely to change for a while.

  • In addition, a lot of car purchases are financed, which means

  • if the resale value of the car dips too low, a buyer could end up

  • paying more for the car than it is worth.

  • That is what it means to be underwater on a loan.

  • Similarly, automakers want their cars to hold as much value as

  • possible, in part because they know customers care about that.

  • Depreciation also affects how automakers charge for leases, which

  • are an effective way of drawing in new customers but are expensive to

  • run for automakers.

  • Every car depreciates differently.

  • Luxury cars lose value.

  • The fastest sedans lose value faster than SUVs, and cars from

  • brands with strong reputations for quality and reliability depreciate

  • more slowly. But on average, cars lose about 10% of their value as

  • soon as you drive them off the lot.

  • There are a few reasons for this.

  • One is that we like new cars.

  • We we just like being in a brand new car and it's not brand new once

  • you take it off the lot.

  • The 10% loss in value corresponds almost exactly with another

  • specific number.

  • And that number, say some insiders, is the primary reason a

  • vehicle's value drops that much in the first day of ownership

  • incentives. Most new cars are sold with incentives at one point or

  • another. When first purchased by a consumer, an incentive is a

  • discount on a vehicle provided by a manufacturer or dealer to induce

  • people to buy it prior to the pandemic.

  • The average incentive on a vehicle was about 10%.

  • That means on average, new vehicles were sold for about 90% of

  • their MSRP or manufacturer's suggested retail price.

  • And so that car you bought seems to drop by 10% in value the moment

  • you drive it off the lot.

  • What is actually happening is that the market is pricing in the

  • probability you received a 10% discount or incentive on that

  • vehicle, even if you didn't.

  • It's kind of a messy part of how we do things, because we can't go back

  • and see what the average transaction price is.

  • But we know historically what MSRP is on a year, make model

  • combination. And so we can go see the value of that car against its

  • original MSRP.

  • Another factor when you sell your car.

  • Chances are you are often selling or trading it back in at a

  • dealership. The dealer is going to offer you the wholesale price on

  • the vehicle. What the vehicle would fetch at a wholesale market

  • like a dealer auction, those prices are always lower than the

  • retail price. What?

  • The dealer would sell it to another consumer for, as there are

  • additional costs and margin that need to be absorbed.

  • That lower wholesale value also makes up part of the depreciation.

  • Consumers see and feel higher priced cars have higher markups or

  • variance, so there is an even bigger gap between their retail

  • price and wholesale value.

  • But there is a third reason why cars lose value so quickly.

  • An economist named George Akerlof won a Nobel Prize for coming up

  • with this idea.

  • Akerlof's famous paper is called The Market for lemons, and the idea

  • works like this.

  • In any market, there are information asymmetries.

  • This means sellers know more about the product they are selling than

  • potential buyers do.

  • If you have a car and it's like three days old or three months old

  • and you sell it, why would you do that?

  • If the car was a good car, you're probably doing it because the car

  • is a lemon.

  • From that first day drop, a car's value slides further about another

  • 10% throughout the first year.

  • In the second and third year, it drops again and again.

  • Estimates of how much can vary depending on who you talk to and

  • what they are measuring.

  • Again, a car will fetch less money on a wholesale market than it will

  • on a retail market, and maybe during a transaction between a

  • private buyer and seller.

  • In normal times, a steady supply of new vehicles year after year is

  • enough to drive the value of any given car down.

  • Add to that the normal wear and tear that comes with ownership.

  • It's like your tires wear out you.

  • You may get dings in your door over time.

  • You know, maybe there's a crack in your windshield.

  • Maybe your kid spills juice in the back seat and the, you know, the

  • upholstery is messed up and all of that's just wear and tear on a car,

  • which means that, um, it's it's not worth what it originally was.

  • Or to put it back in that state, someone would have to invest money

  • to recondition the car back.

  • After about three years.

  • Vehicles, on average, historically held about 50% of their value.

  • Three years is a kind of benchmark for the used car market, because

  • that is the typical time for a lease, and leased vehicles are a

  • large source of vehicles for the used market.

  • There are exceptions to this, of course.

  • Exotic cars, collector cars, limited editions.

  • Any car that is highly valuable won't depreciate normally and can

  • even appreciate it is rare for a car to appreciate or increase in

  • value, but those are some that do.

  • You know if you if you like it enough to buy it a new, you might

  • actually sell it for profit.

  • Uh, some OEMs are trying to fight that.

  • I think Tesla just had a, uh, in their agreement and they just pull

  • it back again. So you cannot resell their Cybertruck for a year.

  • At one point, Tesla even threatened to sue resellers for $50,000.

  • It reportedly removed the clause from its user agreement in

  • mid-November 2023, just days before the truck's release, and

  • then reinstated it when Cybertrucks started popping up for

  • sale on the internet.

  • This was also true of exotics like the Ford GT.

  • Ford sued wrestler and actor John Cena for reselling his Ford GT less

  • than a year after purchasing during the Covid 19 pandemic, as

  • people stayed away from public transportation and flying, used car

  • values skyrocketed by somewhere around 30%.

  • Take your and or $10,000 used car and, uh, by by by the end of that

  • year it was $13,000.

  • So people were buying cars, driving them for a year and then

  • selling them for profit.

  • It's it's still your economy.

  • 101 strong demand, short supply prices went up.

  • It was just to the extreme they've never seen before.

  • On top of it all, production shutdowns and supply chain and chip

  • shortages limited the number of cars in the marketplace.

  • Automakers weren't leasing or selling cars into fleets such as

  • rental agencies.

  • The few cars they were selling were higher priced vehicles that

  • help maximize profits.

  • There were no incentives.

  • New vehicle supply didn't meet demand, though, which drove

  • customers into the used market.

  • Even rental companies, which had sold off a lot of their fleets at

  • the beginning of the pandemic, were buying used cars at auction to

  • satisfy their own customers.

  • We had two very distinct periods of vehicle appreciation, which is

  • unheard of. You know, we we had prices that moved up into the

  • spring and early early summer in 2021.

  • And then they kind of went sideways.

  • And then we got to August, September and they moved up again.

  • And so we ended that year with vehicle prices and values that were

  • much, much higher than what anyone was used to.

  • Fewer new cars in 2020 means fewer used cars in 2023 and 2024.

  • That pandemic price bump has evened out a bit, but cars are

  • holding on to about 60% of their value after three years.

  • A 10% increase from pre-pandemic times.

  • We expect some normal, more normal seasonality, more normal

  • depreciation, but the baseline for prices is going to be elevated.

  • So we've reset prices at a high level.

  • A lot of the goods and materials that go into producing a car are

  • still sitting at high levels.

  • Even though inflation is coming down.

  • We're not in a period of deflation.

  • It's it's highly unlikely that we're going to go back to to having

  • lower car values.

  • The Federal Reserve has raised interest rates in order to rein in

  • inflation, and that has made borrowing more expensive.

  • In the second quarter of 2023, almost 80% of new cars were

  • financed and more than 30% of used ones.

  • Incentives have increased, some from the lows they're in, but not

  • nearly enough to offset.

  • The average new car price right now is almost 30% higher than it

  • was pre pre-pandemic time periods.

  • New vehicle production and sales are also about 2 million units,

  • below the record 17.6 million units hit in 2016.

  • That year, the average transaction price was around $34,077.

  • Average transaction prices in October 2023 were around $48,126.

  • A lot of analysts think that as long as prices stay that high, it

  • will be hard to hit those record volume numbers, and that might be

  • just fine for automakers.

  • A lot of the OEMs have said publicly they don't want to sell

  • that level of new cars.

  • You know, that they're they're trying to be smarter about

  • producing and over producing cars and having to over incentivize cars

  • to keep their profits high.

  • But this means that there will be fewer cars available.

  • A new car might only be sold once, but a used car can be, and often

  • is, sold several times.

  • Constraining the supply of new cars puts a cycle in motion, where

  • the supply of used cars is constrained over and over again.

  • One of the perhaps hidden benefits of depreciation is that it creates

  • a pool of cheap, used cars for buyers who can't afford anything

  • else. The price of a new car in October 2023 was close to $50,000.

  • That is luxury territory.

  • It took almost 39 weeks, with a median American income to purchase

  • a new vehicle. That is down from a record high of more than 41 weeks

  • in December 2022, but still higher than the roughly 33 weeks in

  • October 2019.

  • It's the most important factor out there in the in the marketplace for

  • people. I think there's a lot of consumers that need a replacement

  • car that have been trying to do everything they can to not do that,

  • because they don't want to finance the car and they don't have, you

  • know, $25,000 or whatever to go just pay for it outright.

  • There is a market out there for an OEM that wants to build a more

  • basic product that's new and maybe decontented a little bit, too.

  • And whoever wants to go after that, I think somebody probably

  • will. I think they'll do really well because that's what consumers

  • need and want.

A car is one of the biggest purchases a person will make in

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Why Cars Lose Their Value So Fast

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2024 年 03 月 03 日
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