Dealer-Salesman with customer (Adobe Stock).jpeg Adobe Stock
Rising inventories won’t cut into increased vehicle prices by much, analyst says.

J.D. Power Analyst Bullish on 2022 U.S. Vehicle Market

“For retailers, this should be the best year ever,” says Tyson Jominy, vice president-Data & Analytics, for J.D. Power. “(Tight) inventory is driving the pricing dynamic. We don’t expect to see that improve until at the earliest, in Q4 of this year.”

Dealers should expect “blockbuster” financial results again in 2022, probably all-time record gross profits, as vehicle scarcity continues to drive high prices and low discounting, says Tyson Jominy, vice president-Data & Analytics, for J.D. Power.

“For retailers, this should be the best year ever,” Jominy says at the 35th Annual Automotive Outlook Conference hosted online by the Society of Automotive Analysts.

“Inventory is driving the pricing dynamic,” he says. “We don’t expect to see that improve until at the earliest, in Q4 of this year.”

Realistically, it’s probably going to be more than a year from now, in the spring of 2023, before the ongoing computer chip shortage and other supply-chain problems improve to the point where the auto retail industry can even begin to satisfy pent-up demand and rebuild inventory faster than new vehicles are sold, Jominy says.

Meanwhile, dealers probably will continue to make an average gross profit of more than $3,000 per new vehicle, Jominy says. The average, new-vehicle transaction price in December 2021 was a record $45,300, an increase of more than $10,000 vs. December 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic, he says.

A lot of the increase probably disappears when inventory catches up with demand, but some of that increase probably sticks, Jominy says. “We’re still going to see high prices.”

Also at the online conference, Elaine Buckberg, chief economist for General Motors, says she expects U.S. light-vehicle sales of about 16 million in 2022. According to Wards Intelligence, total light-vehicle sales for 2021 were 14.93 million units, up 3.1% from 14.47 million in 2020.

“Massive pent-up demand” is a big tailwind for U.S. light-vehicle sales, Buckberg says. She estimates about 4 million units couldn’t be built in 2020 and 2021 because of the pandemic, the computer chip shortage and other supply-chain bottlenecks.

Most of those purchases were likely postponed, not canceled, Buckberg says. “People who rely on a vehicle are perhaps only more reliant” than they were before the pandemic, she says.

Meanwhile, interest rates and fuel prices are still low by historical standards, even if there have been increases. In addition, used vehicles aren’t necessarily a good alternative, because in percentage terms, used-vehicle prices have seen an even bigger increase than new, Buckberg says.

“When you think of pent-up demand, you think of people only deferring a purchase until later,” she says. “People need a vehicle.”

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