auto dealer in black and red logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Car Depreciation Accelerates in August, Black Book Reports

Only two car segments ranked in the Top 12 for strongest monthly retention, the firm reported this week. It added that depreciation for all car segments topped rates recorded during the last three years for the month of August.

by Staff
September 8, 2016
2 min to read


LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. — The average price of a used vehicle for model years 2011-2015 depreciated 2.4% during August, noticeably more than July’s 1.5% decline, according to Black Book.

The decline is also notably more than what was recorded the last three years during the month of August — even higher than August 2014’s 1.9% depreciation rate. Cars overall recorded the highest depreciation, with prices falling 3.1% compared to 1.9% in July. Truck segment showed depreciation of 1.8% for the month, with all vehicles currently averaging a 12-month depreciation change of 16.2%.

Depreciation for near-luxury cars, including the Acura ILX, Audi A4, BMW 3-Series, Cadillac ATS, and Lexus IS250, was the highest at 3.7%. Vehicles in this segment finished the month with an average price of $18,112, a 19.5% decline from year-ago levels ($22,501).

Full-size pickups, including the Chevy Silverado, Dodge Ram, Ford F150, and GMC Sierra, recorded the highest retention, with prices depreciating only 0.6%. Vehicles in this segment finished the month with an average price of $24,372, a 10.2% decline from a year ago ($27,152).

Four other vehicle segments saw depreciation of 3% or greater in August. Those segments were the sub-compact car (3.5%); sporty cars (3.4%); luxury cars (3.3%); and compact cars (3.3%).

The top six segments with the weakest retention during August were all cars. And while prestige luxury cars recorded the strongest retention among all car segments, its 2.2% depreciation rate made it just the eighth best-performing segment overall for the month. In fact, just two car segments ranked in the Top 12 among retention for the month (premium sporty car depreciated 2.7%).

“As fall approaches, depreciation trends continue to accelerate as we head toward the last few months of the year,” said Anil Goyal, senior vice president of automotive valuation and analytics for Black book.  “We can expect to see lower retention in cars across all segments as the year continues, and we’ll continue to monitor truck levels to see if they also see weaker retention overall.”

More Auto Finance

Industryby StaffAugust 15, 2024

The Risk When the Customer Is Not in the Dealership

Take this series of steps to help protect your business from fraud by this method.

Read More →
F&Iby StaffAugust 13, 2024

Auto Loan Access Keeps Falling

July conditions tighter for consumers despite average loan rate decline.

Read More →
F&Iby StaffAugust 12, 2024

Dealers Wary of AI in Auto Finance

Poll shows growing aversion to technology’s accelerating part in process.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Auto FinanceJuly 25, 2024

Is the Death Knell Being Sounded for Dealer Financing?

There appears to be a regulatory target on auto dealer-provided loans.

Read More →
Industryby StaffJuly 24, 2024

Ferrari Calls Cryptocurrency Foray a Success

Carmaker will add the payment options in its European dealerships this month after introducing it in the U.S. last year.

Read More →
Industryby StaffJuly 16, 2024

New-Vehicle Affordability Is Up

June conditions, including best average loan rate in a year, make buying more likely.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Industryby StaffJuly 12, 2024

Pandemic-Era Prices Affect Trade-Ins

New buyers, especially those with EV trade-ins, are feeling the brunt of depreciation as market normalizes.

Read More →
Industryby StaffJuly 1, 2024

Auto Credit Crunch Tightens

Borrowers taking on more debt, moving many into delinquent territory.

Read More →
Auto Financeby StaffJune 19, 2024

New Cars Within Easier Reach

Affordability metrics improved in May as lending costs ebbed, finances flowed more freely.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Auto Financeby Hannah MitchellJune 13, 2024

A Good Deal

Rising auto loan delinquencies, though bad news, could be another opportunity for agents to help dealers come down from pandemic highs.

Read More →