Buy-Sell Market Momentum Continues
Q3 activity points to prospect of a record year in dealership trading.

This year’s conditions and others point to continued robust buy-sell activity next year.
Pexels/Antoni Shkraba
The U.S. dealership buy-sell market is proving to be super-charged this year, as activity in the first nine months is almost double prepandemic volume, according to Kerrigan Advisors data.
The sell-side firm said 330 transactions took place during the period representing 544 franchises. That’s up from 313 deals over 528 franchises during the same stretch last year and on track for a record year.
In 2019, the last full year before the pandemic, there were 161 transactions totaling 233 franchises, Kerrigan said.
The dealership deals pipeline is being filled from a confluence of factors, the firm said: moderating industry profits creating clearer valuations; more sellers emerging due to pandemic-era profits moving dealers to retire earlier; dealer groups selling weaker franchises; and large auto groups’ focus on scaling.
“Most now believe a ‘new normal’ has arrived and are comfortable basing their valuations on current earnings,” Kerrigan’s third-quarter Blue Sky Report says.
The firm estimates that auto dealer profits ballooned between 2020 and 2024 to three times the level reached in the previous four years to $278 billion pretax. The flush conditions inspire more dealers to sell their businesses, especially those with no succession plans, said Kerrigan, which estimates that blue-sky values for most franchises are healthy, though 19% off their historical peak.
This year’s conditions point to continued robust buy-sell activity next year, Kerrigan foresees, due to the fact that much of the accumulated earnings haven’t been leveraged, along with moderating interest rates, increased incentive spending, normalizing new-vehicle gross profits, and industry growth prospects during a second Trump administration.
The firm said franchises with the highest buy-sell market share in their segments for the period were CDJR, with 32% domestic market share, Nissan, with 20% import nonluxury share, and Infiniti, with 13% import luxury market share.
More Industry

Automakers Develop Car Sanitizer
Hyundai and Kia say the particular ultraviolet light used in the technology has been demonstrated to kill the vast majority of a potentially harmful bacterium inside a vehicle.
Read More →
European EV Market Hits Record
Seven out of the top 10 electric vehicles sold so far in 2026 in Europe are by European brands, and automakers are seeing the power train fill up their order books.
Read More →
Used EVs Outpace New
While North American electric-vehicle sales remain down year-over-year, May sales saw a 3% increase from April’s numbers as used EVs led the market.
Read More →
Consumer Outlook on the Rise
Younger generations are feeling more positive about their financial futures and current affordability pressures than older generations, according to recent TransUnion data.
Read More →
AutoNation Acquires Top Toyota Store
The automotive group added Toyota of Newnan, a high-performing dealership in Georgia, to its roster of over 300 rooftops across the U.S.
Read More →
Reynolds Names Speakers for Amplify Event
The keynoters will explore challenges that are reshaping the industry, speaking on how dealerships can adapt, innovate and thrive in a rapidly changing atmosphere.
Read More →
Mitsubishi Sets Growth Strategy, Structural Transformation
The Japanese automaker aims to 'strengthen products and technologies that embody its brand identity,' focus on its strongest markets and expand value-chain businesses 'that leverage its unique strengths.'
Read More →
Why Your F&I PVR Is Misleading You
Here’s a handy checklist of the numbers to track in 2026 instead.
Read More →
Need for Speed: EV Apps Lack Consistency
Fifty-five percent of surveyed EV owners said their mobile applications had a major or moderate impact on their purchasing decisions, but connectivity issues remain a problem.
Read More →
Inventory of New Units Stable
Auto brands spent April clearing out most of their 2025 supply with incentives while holding firm on 2026 prices, striking a balance to meet demand and protect their bottom lines.
Read More →