HomeBusinessLower-priced new cars are gaining popularity, and not just for cash-strapped buyers

Lower-priced new cars are gaining popularity, and not just for cash-strapped buyers

DETROIT (AP) — If she wanted to, Michelle Chumley could have afforded an expensive new SUV loaded with options. But when it came time to replace her Chevrolet Blazer SUV, which she paid about $40,000 for three years ago, Chumley opted for something smaller. And less expensive.

With her purchase of a Chevrolet Trax compact SUV in June, Chumley joined a growing number of buyers who have made vehicles in the below-average price range of $20,000 to $30,000 the fastest-growing segment of the nation’s new car market.

“I just don’t want that big vehicle and paying all that gas money,” said Chumley, a 56-year-old nurse who lives outside Oxford, Ohio, near Cincinnati.

Across the industry, auto analysts say, an “affordability shift” is taking root. The trend is led by people who feel they can no longer afford a new vehicle that would cost them roughly the current average sales price of more than $47,000 – a jump of more than 20% from the pre- pandemic.

To buy a new car at that price, an average buyer would have to spend $737 per month, if financed at the current average borrowing rate of 7.1%, for just under six years before the vehicle would be paid off, according to Edmunds.com . a site for car research and pricing. For many, this is financially out of reach.

Still, there are other buyers who, like Chumley, can handle the financial burden but have concluded it’s just not worth the cost. And the trend is forcing U.S. automakers to reassess their sales and production strategies. As buyers faced high prices and continued high borrowing rates, sales of new U.S. cars rose just 1% through September from the same period last year. If the trend toward cheaper cars proves to be permanent, more generous discounts could lead to lower average car prices and declining industry profits.

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“Consumers are becoming more cautious as they face economic uncertainty, interest rates that remain high and vehicle prices that remain elevated,” said Kevin Roberts, director of market intelligence at CarGurus, an auto shopping site. “This year, all the growth is in what we would consider the more affordable price segments.”

Under pressure to release their higher-priced models, automakers have lowered the retail prices of many such vehicles, largely by offering higher discounts. According to Edmunds, the average incentive per car nearly doubled in the past year to $1,812.

General Motors said it kept discounts in check and average car prices held steady around $49,000 from July to September. That delivered a pretax profit gain of $900 million from a year ago, but the company doesn’t expect that in the fourth quarter.

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