NADA Market Beat: Limited Vehicle Availability Continues to Impact Sales Despite Slight Inventory Increases in November
While November began with a slight increase in inventory levels from September’s all-time lows, limited vehicle availability continues to keep sales well below current demand.

While November began with a slight increase in inventory levels from September’s all-time lows, limited vehicle availability continues to keep sales well below current demand.
NADA – New light-vehicle sales in November came in below expectations, with a SAAR of 12.9 million units, down 19% from November 2020. Despite November’s month-to-month decline, sales through the first 11 months of the year are up by 7% compared with the same period in 2020. While November began with a slight increase in inventory levels from September’s all-time lows, limited vehicle availability continues to keep sales well below current demand. Month-end inventory in November 2021 was up by 2.9% from October 2021, but inventory could again fall a bit during the final month of the year. Tight vehicle inventories will continue to limit sales somewhat in the early months of 2022, but the inventory drag on sales should ease throughout the year as inventories build slowly and steadily.
For the second straight month, light trucks represented more than 80% of all new vehicles sold. Year to date, light trucks have accounted for 77.4% of all new light-vehicle sales. Those new light trucks and cars continue to move off dealer lots at a record pace. The average number of days a new vehicle sits on the lot, according to J.D. Power, fell to a record low of 19 days in November, down from 48 days in November 2020. Average incentive spending per unit is expected to be up slightly to $1,612 in November from October’s record-low $1,598. With lower discounts and high demand, average transaction prices should reach a November record of just over $44,000, J.D. Power says. Average trade-in values, which are up 83% year over year, and new-vehicle finance rates, which are down from a year ago, have helped consumers deal with those rising prices to some degree.
Given the ongoing microchip shortage and its expected impact on vehicle deliveries during the final month of the year, we have lowered our expectations for total light-vehicle sales in 2021. We now expect that new light-vehicle sales will total 14.9 million units for the year.
To read the full report, click here.
Originally posted on Auto Dealer Today
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