GeneralCamaro Trade In Question
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GeneralCamaro Trade In QuestionPosted:

Disrutive
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Hey TTG I currently have a 2010 rs camaro and thinking about trading in for a 2016+. Anyone think it's worth it or just I stick it out with my 2010
#2. Posted:
002
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What is the current value of each car? I'd say if your car isn't worth very much / if the new car is over double the value of your car then you should wait. The car market is crashing (especially those that get poor mpg) so while you might get a better deal on your trade now, you'll lose hand over fist when looking at how much you spent on the new car.
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Disc
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002 wrote What is the current value of each car? I'd say if your car isn't worth very much / if the new car is over double the value of your car then you should wait. The car market is crashing (especially those that get poor mpg) so while you might get a better deal on your trade now, you'll lose hand over fist when looking at how much you spent on the new car.


what makes you think its crashing? its still rising in tons of areas and has yet to fall, our dealership is still seeing the same RBB and same auction numbers etc. was your comment just a guess or do you know something everyone at dealerships and retail stores around the country dont know
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Don't work at a dealership so I don't know exact current markets for trade-ins, but with used prices being what they have been the past 18 or so months, if you're committed to getting a new Camaro then it's likely that you'd be best getting whatever you can on trade for your '10 now. Pre-owned value is inflated at the moment, and the value of your '10 is only going to depreciate long term. Meanwhile, MSRP on new models are only going to increase. The used market will (eventually) start to decline, but the sticker on a new RS will only increase year over year.

Knowing mileage/condition of your current would give more insight onto what you could expect to get for it, but in general, used values are inflated at the moment so I'd personally go ahead and get a trade-in quote. If you're committed to wanting a new RS now, I'd say pull the trigger.
#5. Posted:
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Disc wrote
002 wrote What is the current value of each car? I'd say if your car isn't worth very much / if the new car is over double the value of your car then you should wait. The car market is crashing (especially those that get poor mpg) so while you might get a better deal on your trade now, you'll lose hand over fist when looking at how much you spent on the new car.


what makes you think its crashing? its still rising in tons of areas and has yet to fall, our dealership is still seeing the same RBB and same auction numbers etc. was your comment just a guess or do you know something everyone at dealerships and retail stores around the country dont know


The data is what's indicating that the market is declining lol. The numbers are slightly different depending on what website you go to, but here's what CarGurus and KBB have to say.



As for why, there's more supply than previous years, and as of current there's less demand which naturally makes the prices go down. Since we seen a sharp increase in price due to Covid wreaking havoc on the car industry (chip supplies, manufacturing down turns, ect), we will start to see a pretty steady decrease over the coming year(s). So no, I don't know something that everyone at dealerships and retail stores around the country don't know, this is pretty common knowledge, I'd almost say especially for dealerships and retail stores lol. Just like any business, they will ride out these huge price increases for as long as they can.
#6. Posted:
Disc
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002 wrote
Disc wrote
002 wrote What is the current value of each car? I'd say if your car isn't worth very much / if the new car is over double the value of your car then you should wait. The car market is crashing (especially those that get poor mpg) so while you might get a better deal on your trade now, you'll lose hand over fist when looking at how much you spent on the new car.


what makes you think its crashing? its still rising in tons of areas and has yet to fall, our dealership is still seeing the same RBB and same auction numbers etc. was your comment just a guess or do you know something everyone at dealerships and retail stores around the country dont know


The data is what's indicating that the market is declining lol. The numbers are slightly different depending on what website you go to, but here's what CarGurus and KBB have to say.



As for why, there's more supply than previous years, and as of current there's less demand which naturally makes the prices go down. Since we seen a sharp increase in price due to Covid wreaking havoc on the car industry (chip supplies, manufacturing down turns, ect), we will start to see a pretty steady decrease over the coming year(s). So no, I don't know something that everyone at dealerships and retail stores around the country don't know, this is pretty common knowledge, I'd almost say especially for dealerships and retail stores lol. Just like any business, they will ride out these huge price increases for as long as they can.


well here at our GM store, we still have 0 chips incoming and are now doing retrofits on heated seat etc on new models bc no chips. and at auctions were having the same issue with getting inventor and are having to pay 2-30% over KBB RBB from 2019 pricing so that is factually not the case
#7. Posted:
002
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Disc wrote
002 wrote
Disc wrote
002 wrote What is the current value of each car? I'd say if your car isn't worth very much / if the new car is over double the value of your car then you should wait. The car market is crashing (especially those that get poor mpg) so while you might get a better deal on your trade now, you'll lose hand over fist when looking at how much you spent on the new car.


what makes you think its crashing? its still rising in tons of areas and has yet to fall, our dealership is still seeing the same RBB and same auction numbers etc. was your comment just a guess or do you know something everyone at dealerships and retail stores around the country dont know


The data is what's indicating that the market is declining lol. The numbers are slightly different depending on what website you go to, but here's what CarGurus and KBB have to say.



As for why, there's more supply than previous years, and as of current there's less demand which naturally makes the prices go down. Since we seen a sharp increase in price due to Covid wreaking havoc on the car industry (chip supplies, manufacturing down turns, ect), we will start to see a pretty steady decrease over the coming year(s). So no, I don't know something that everyone at dealerships and retail stores around the country don't know, this is pretty common knowledge, I'd almost say especially for dealerships and retail stores lol. Just like any business, they will ride out these huge price increases for as long as they can.


well here at our GM store, we still have 0 chips incoming and are now doing retrofits on heated seat etc on new models bc no chips. and at auctions were having the same issue with getting inventor and are having to pay 2-30% over KBB RBB from 2019 pricing so that is factually not the case


Yes the issues are still out there, however I believe you missed the point. Just like you said, we are still over what prices were in 2019, however if you zoom in to the past 30, 60 90 days, we are starting to see a decrease with the numbers going down more and more each month. There is expected to be a chip shortage into 2024, however a shortage is just that, a shortage.

For example, and I'm just giving made up numbers but lets say during the height of it all these chips were being produced at 25% the rate they were needed, therefore leaving a 75% shortage. That's obviously a big issue. Now we're catching up and we might be at say 90%. That still leave a technical shortage of 10%, however the issue isn't as big as it was in years prior. Factually, supply chain issues in regards to chips are clearing up, which aids in catching up to the previous deficit. JD Power is forecasting a drop in used car prices between now and early 2023.

That is all assuming that everything stays the way it is now, however it does get more in dept than that. The federal reserve is raising rates (in home loans we've already watched them double in a year) and as anyone would guess, the higher the interest rate, the less someone can afford. Here's how the auto industry is doing on that front.



Another driving factor is that the pandemic taught us that a lot of us can work from home. In doing that we put a lot less wear and tear on our vehicles and therefore we don't need to replace them as often which decreases demand.

When the person that works from home finally decides to trade in their car after say 10 years now (average American keeps a car for 8 years, but as explained above that number may rise), they get hit with that 6% interest rate instead of the 4% which means they can afford less. The average monthly car payment is $667 for a new car and $515 for a used car. Just playing with numbers here, say you put 10% down on your car, at 4% interest you were able to afford a $40,000 new car and a $31,000 used car. at 6% interest your buying power gets decreased so you loose $2,000 in buying power right off the bat.


TLDR: chip manufacturing is making a come back so more people will be able to buy new cars again which means less demand for used cars, and therefore a price drop. Interest rates are on the rise which means we can't afford what we used to, so dealerships cant sell cars for as much as they used to, which in turn means you get less on your trade because they can't sell it for as much as they used to. in 3 years we watched the used car market fo up 42% which is extremally un stable. Will we see an overnight collapse? No. Will we watch it start to ebb off over the coming years? Absolutely. There's nothing to indicate prices will continue to rise or even stay the same, prices are on the fall.
#8. Posted:
Disc
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002 wrote
Disc wrote
002 wrote
Disc wrote
002 wrote What is the current value of each car? I'd say if your car isn't worth very much / if the new car is over double the value of your car then you should wait. The car market is crashing (especially those that get poor mpg) so while you might get a better deal on your trade now, you'll lose hand over fist when looking at how much you spent on the new car.


what makes you think its crashing? its still rising in tons of areas and has yet to fall, our dealership is still seeing the same RBB and same auction numbers etc. was your comment just a guess or do you know something everyone at dealerships and retail stores around the country dont know


The data is what's indicating that the market is declining lol. The numbers are slightly different depending on what website you go to, but here's what CarGurus and KBB have to say.



As for why, there's more supply than previous years, and as of current there's less demand which naturally makes the prices go down. Since we seen a sharp increase in price due to Covid wreaking havoc on the car industry (chip supplies, manufacturing down turns, ect), we will start to see a pretty steady decrease over the coming year(s). So no, I don't know something that everyone at dealerships and retail stores around the country don't know, this is pretty common knowledge, I'd almost say especially for dealerships and retail stores lol. Just like any business, they will ride out these huge price increases for as long as they can.


well here at our GM store, we still have 0 chips incoming and are now doing retrofits on heated seat etc on new models bc no chips. and at auctions were having the same issue with getting inventor and are having to pay 2-30% over KBB RBB from 2019 pricing so that is factually not the case


Yes the issues are still out there, however I believe you missed the point. Just like you said, we are still over what prices were in 2019, however if you zoom in to the past 30, 60 90 days, we are starting to see a decrease with the numbers going down more and more each month. There is expected to be a chip shortage into 2024, however a shortage is just that, a shortage.

For example, and I'm just giving made up numbers but lets say during the height of it all these chips were being produced at 25% the rate they were needed, therefore leaving a 75% shortage. That's obviously a big issue. Now we're catching up and we might be at say 90%. That still leave a technical shortage of 10%, however the issue isn't as big as it was in years prior. Factually, supply chain issues in regards to chips are clearing up, which aids in catching up to the previous deficit. JD Power is forecasting a drop in used car prices between now and early 2023.

That is all assuming that everything stays the way it is now, however it does get more in dept than that. The federal reserve is raising rates (in home loans we've already watched them double in a year) and as anyone would guess, the higher the interest rate, the less someone can afford. Here's how the auto industry is doing on that front.



Another driving factor is that the pandemic taught us that a lot of us can work from home. In doing that we put a lot less wear and tear on our vehicles and therefore we don't need to replace them as often which decreases demand.

When the person that works from home finally decides to trade in their car after say 10 years now (average American keeps a car for 8 years, but as explained above that number may rise), they get hit with that 6% interest rate instead of the 4% which means they can afford less. The average monthly car payment is $667 for a new car and $515 for a used car. Just playing with numbers here, say you put 10% down on your car, at 4% interest you were able to afford a $40,000 new car and a $31,000 used car. at 6% interest your buying power gets decreased so you loose $2,000 in buying power right off the bat.


TLDR: chip manufacturing is making a come back so more people will be able to buy new cars again which means less demand for used cars, and therefore a price drop. Interest rates are on the rise which means we can't afford what we used to, so dealerships cant sell cars for as much as they used to, which in turn means you get less on your trade because they can't sell it for as much as they used to. in 3 years we watched the used car market fo up 42% which is extremally un stable. Will we see an overnight collapse? No. Will we watch it start to ebb off over the coming years? Absolutely. There's nothing to indicate prices will continue to rise or even stay the same, prices are on the fall.


we still cant get chips. but weve been able to sell the vehicles without them for along time now. so thats not changing the demand. we are still up in prices and it has not shown any decrease in any of our auction buys in fact tons of makes are still selling for more than MSRP new on a 2 year old car. interest rates are up because the banks are losing their ass. we are still marking up our new cars that we have by a large margin. we have a 2022 amg in our showroom right now for like 30k over sticker lol
#9. Posted:
002
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Well I guess moral of the story is everywhere else is seeing a downward trend with no evidence to support the idea that prices will continue to stay at their current rate or even rise, I've shown factual graphs as to what's happening in the world today but I would figure out what dealer Disc works at and stay clear of that place lol.
#10. Posted:
Disc
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002 wrote Well I guess moral of the story is everywhere else is seeing a downward trend with no evidence to support the idea that prices will continue to stay at their current rate or even rise, I've shown factual graphs as to what's happening in the world today but I would figure out what dealer Disc works at and stay clear of that place lol.
better stay away from every dealer then. dealerships use a nationwide system to compare prices, rates etc. i work at a Chevy/Ford dealer with a connecting toyota and nissan under same ownership. so lol
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