Daily Trade News

Inside the frenzied used-car market stuck in overdrive


But returning the car would not only leave Lawfer without a way to get to showings, part of him is holding out for an even bigger payday, hoping that if he waits a few months prices would go even higher.

“I’m playing the market,” he said. Yes, for used cars.

Used cars aren’t minting millionaires, like Bitcoin or Moderna. But a little bit of luck is shining down on people who don’t always have enough of it. Many people driving modest cars — dare we say even clunkers — are finding their heaps are worth something. They may not have the latest safety features, or even an attached bumper, but they’ve got one major thing in their favor: They’re here now.

Since March 2020, used cars and truck prices have gone up 43.3 percent, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Consumer Price Index. That’s compared with an 11.7 percent rise for new vehicles, and an overall US inflation rate of 7.3 percent.

The average listing price of a used vehicle for sale on the online platform CarGurus broke $30,000 at the end of October, compared with about $23,000 a year earlier, according to Kevin Roberts, director of industry analytics for the Cambridge-based site. .

Although it’s hard to remember back less than two years ago, there was a time when the one true thing in this world was that a car lost value the moment it was driven off the lot.

Now?

“A car you bought six months ago could now be worth $5,000 more than you paid for it last spring,” said Charlie Karyanis, president of City Motor Group, a Cambridge firm that buys and sells used and new cars to dealerships.

He recently paid a customer $85,000 for a 2021 BMW that cost $79,000 new. The owner of a 2016 Toyota Corolla got nearly $17,000 for a car that cost $19,630 more than five years ago. A 2021 Ram TRX truck earned its owner $10,000 over the list price.

Are these cars — or Southie condos?

In Andover this summer, Trevor Barcelo sold his Porsche 911 — his “fun car,” in his wife’s words. He paid $73,000 for it in 2016 and figured it would depreciate about $6,000 or more per year, for a $30,000 hit.

Instead … a dealer from Acton came over, checked out the car, and promptly wired him $74,000. For the hard work of driving a sports car for five years he earned $1,000. “I’m going through my stuff to see if there’s anything else I can sell,” joked Barcelo, a VP of engineering at a technology consulting firm.

Of course, not everyone has an extra “fun car” to sell. And for many, the prospect of easy money is vying with the stress of having to find a new vehicle.

“It’s getting to the point where I think I might be crazy if I don’t sell,” said Brian Bell, a producer and on-air personality with the ROR Morning Show.

He’s on the receiving end of vigorous outreach from the dealer who sold him a new Chevy Traverse in 2016 and now wants to buy it back — for $4,200 over the Kelley Blue Book value. “But I’m like within a year of paying it off,” Bell said. I’ll be free…



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