Black Book: Market Insights Report
While this is the fourth consecutive week of declining wholesale values, decreases are still relatively modest compared to year-to-date gains.

While this is the fourth consecutive week of declining wholesale values, decreases are still relatively modest compared to year-to-date gains.
Wholesale Prices, Week Ending July 24th
Used wholesale market prices continued their descent this week, but at a slightly lower rate than last week. Overall, used wholesale values declined -0.54% from the prior week; when comparing this to the same week in prior years, this week’s decrease is more than doubled. While this is the fourth consecutive week of declining wholesale values, decreases are still relatively modest compared to year-to-date gains.
This Week Last Week 2017-2019 Average (Same Week)
Car segments -0.63% -1.03% -0.29%
Truck & SUV segments -0.49% -0.41% -0.22%
Market -0.54% -0.62% -0.25%
Car Segments
On a volume-weighted basis, the overall Car segment decreased -0.63%. For reference, the previous week decreased by -1.03%.
Sub-compact cars had the only weekly gain (+0.31%) and has increased for 24-consecutive weeks.
Mid-size cars had the steepest decline at -1%.
Eight of the nine segments declined this week.
Truck / SUV Segments
On a volume-weighted basis, the overall Truck segment decreased -0.49% this past week. For reference, the previous week decreased by -0.41%.
Compact & Full-size Vans had minor weekly gains at +0.07% and +0.09%, respectively.
Sub-compact Luxury Crossover had the steepest decline at –0.94%, followed closely by Small Pickups (-0.85%) and Sub-compact Crossovers (-0.81%).
Weekly Wholesale Index
Calendar year 2020 ended with used wholesale prices at elevated levels. With economic patterns (including the automotive market) driven by the pandemic, normal seasonal patterns (e.g., 2019 calendar year) in the wholesale market were not observed for most of the year. We saw a similar picture in 2009, at the end of the Great Recession. Calendar year 2021 has not had typical seasonality patterns as the market had rapid increases in wholesale values for the majority of the year so far. After reaching record heights at the end of June, wholesale prices started to come down in July.
The graph below looks at trends in wholesale prices of 2-6-year-old vehicles, indexed to the first week of the year.
Retail (Used and New) Insights
Tesla CEO, Elon Musk, announced that Tesla would open the Supercharger network to other automakers by the end of the year.
Daimler announced its EV strategy this week, revealing plans to introduce only new EV platforms after 2025, and be all-electric after 2030.
In addition to the Hummer, GMC announced another electric pickup is in the works – it will share many components with the Silverado.
EV startup Rivian plans to build a second U.S. assembly plant that will also include battery cell production.
Volkswagen’s Herbert Diess has confirmed that VW will roll out a VW ID.8, which will be comparable to the midsize VW Atlas.
Used Retail Prices
With the proliferation of ‘no-haggle pricing’ for used-vehicle retailing, asking prices accurately measure trends in the retail space. Retail demand slowed down at the end of last year, and thus resulted in declining retail asking prices for the last several weeks of 2020. As demand rebounded, retail prices have lagged slightly behind wholesale prices, but March had an accelerated growth in retail prices. In April and May, retail prices picked up speed as demand accelerated, fueled by stimulus payments, tax season, and shortages of new inventory. In June, retail prices continued to rise. After 19 weeks of continuous increases, retail prices seemed to reach their peak last week; like wholesale prices, we saw a slight drop in retail listing prices. Currently, retail prices are just under 25% above where we started the year.
This analysis is based on approximately two million vehicles listed for sale on US dealer lots. The graph below looks at 2-6-year-old vehicles.
Inventory
Used Retail
Current used retail listing volume is about 11% below the start of the year. As retail demand softened in the last several weeks (both for new and used vehicles), used inventory remained relatively flat but is now starting to decrease again.
Days-to-turn started to increase last week, as retail demand has softened in the last several weeks.
Wholesale
As floor pricing remains strong and the availability of average and clean vehicles continues to be scarce, conversion rates have been going down over the last several weeks. The average sell rate now sits around 65%, which is the lowest average rate since the beginning of March. We anticipate sell rates will slowly fall until floor prices come down.
Despite the limited inventory on dealer lots, dealer lanes continue to have higher volume at auction, while manufacturers’ remarketing lanes are offering less and less in open sales channels. Dealers have found creative ways to diversify their source of inventory, and their innovation seems to be paying off, as some continue to have record-breaking sales months.
Sellers are becoming more flexible with their floors in the lanes as vehicle values start to decrease. With semiconductor chips still in short supply, the new inventory pipeline continues to be extremely limited. Because of the scarcity in the wholesale market, vehicles with slight damage or open recalls are still selling, if the price is right.
More Auto Finance

Mastering Credit Friction
In this video, Josh Krach explains how to turn credit friction into an advantage.
Read More →
April Less Affordable
Based on prices, reduced incentives and slower household income growth, consumers found it more challenging to buy new last month, Cox Automotive reported.
Read More →
Auto Lenders, Consumers on a Tightrope
April borrowing data shows that more consumers are bending over backward to buy vehicles, though subprime lending cooled off for the month.
Read More →
Toyota Financial Services President Replaced
Scott Cooke has served in various roles with Toyota Financial Services for over 20 years, including president and CEO, which he retires from on June 30.
Read More →
Permission or Approval: When to Notify Finance Sources
Credit card down payments, multiple vehicle purchases and even straw purchases can be completed without committing bank fraud, as long as you tell the bank first.
Read More →
At-Risk Auto Borrowers Drive Looser Credit Access
Cox Automotive’s index shows the subprime segment, long loan terms, negative-equity borrowers and down payment amounts all grew in February despite ever-higher vehicle prices.
Read More →
Auto Loan Forecast Bucks Market Trend
Auto loan originations rose over 6% year-over-year in the third quarter of 2025, but TransUnion predicts a slight decline in auto loan growth this year, making it an outlier in the company's overall lending forecast.
Read More →
Auto Credit More Plentiful
Growing access shows greater lender appetite for risk as consumers take on heavier debt burden in an inflated market.
Read More →
Auto Loans Long as Stretch Limos
More consumers, faced with ever-rising car prices, are adapting by agreeing to longer loan terms despite the cost of added interest payments.
Read More →
AutoPayPlus Launches RePayPlus
The reinsured biweekly payment program offers auto dealers with customer retention and reinsurance structure.
Read More →