Inside ‘weird, wacky’ auto economy

Inside ‘weird, wacky’ auto economy

COMMERCE CITY, Colorado ‒ For the better part of 20 years, auto hauler Tom Kingston has had a front-row seat to the ups and downs of the U.S. car-sales market.

Now, car dealers are having a harder time selling, and are increasingly tempting consumers with incentives and long loan repayment offers.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, when supplies were short and buyers had stimulus payments to spend, vehicles were flying off the lots, sometimes at prices well above sticker.

“For two years, everything on my truck when I delivered was already sold by the dealers,” said Kingston, 58, during a pause loading nine Audi sedans and hatchbacks. “Now that COVID’s over, they’re like, ‘More? We don’t have no room.'”

A row of new vehicles awaiting delivery at a railroad yard in suburban Denver on Sept. 5, 2024.

Cars have long been a key component of the American economy, and the current state of the auto market reflects a series of contradictions: While sales of new and used cars are climbing, loan delinquencies and repossessions have also risen from their mid-pandemic lows.

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“It is a weird, wacky time, and the consumer is definitely being stretched thin,” said Zach Shefska, the CEO of New York-based car-buying service CarEdge.

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