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Strategies & Market Trends : Technical analysis for shorts & longs
SPY 691.72-0.1%Jan 16 4:00 PM EST

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To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (54833)1/21/2022 2:22:59 AM
From: Johnny Canuck  Read Replies (1) of 69832
 
Why car prices remain so stubbornly high
Chris Isidore byline
By Chris Isidore, CNN Business

Updated 10:03 AM ET, Thu January 20, 2022

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LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - NOVEMBER 11: A person shops in the meat section of a grocery store on November 11, 2021 in Los Angeles, California. U.S. consumer prices have increased solidly in the past few months on items such as food, rent, cars and other goods as inflation has risen to a level not seen in 30 years. The consumer-price index rose by 6.2 percent in October compared to one year ago. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)
Key inflation measure hits 39-year high

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A 'Help Wanted' sign is posted beside Coronavirus safety guidelines in front of a restaurant in Los Angeles, California on May 28, 2021.
Why are people quitting their jobs?

Inflation may stay high in 2022

Manpower CEO: Employers are optimistic

Economist predicts how Omicron will impact the economy

Coal miners urge Manchin to reconsider Build Back Better

US grapples with shortage of child care workers

The Federal Reserve signals rate hikes in 2022

The child tax credit has supported these families. They're worried about what's next

'It's insane': Gas station owner reveals what inflation is doing to his business
People walk by a Help Wanted sign in the Queens borough of New York City on June 04, 2021 in New York City.
Where are all the workers? Here are four reasons behind the labor shortage

IMF Director: Supply disruptions may continue into 2023

ADP Economist: Higher wages aren't enough to bring workers back
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - NOVEMBER 11: A person shops in the meat section of a grocery store on November 11, 2021 in Los Angeles, California. U.S. consumer prices have increased solidly in the past few months on items such as food, rent, cars and other goods as inflation has risen to a level not seen in 30 years. The consumer-price index rose by 6.2 percent in October compared to one year ago. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)
Key inflation measure hits 39-year high

Restaurant owner who lost $2 million in weeks speaks out

Warren uses 'econ 101' to grill Jerome Powell
A 'Help Wanted' sign is posted beside Coronavirus safety guidelines in front of a restaurant in Los Angeles, California on May 28, 2021.
Why are people quitting their jobs?
New York (CNN Business)Relief from record high auto prices could be coming soon. But that doesn't mean those prices will go back to where they were before the pandemic.

A shortage of necessary parts — primarily computer chips — limited production of new vehicles around the globe. That left car dealers short of supply to meet demand, allowing them to charge a premium for the cars they had available.
The average transaction price for a new car was $46,426 in December 2021, according to Edmunds, up $5,850 — or 14% — from a year prior.
That increase was primarily due to customers paying more than the listed sticker price — an average of $700 above what manufacturers' were recommending. In December 2020, car buyers paid an average of $2,550 below the sticker price, close to the typical discount buyers traditionally pay.
Used car prices ended the year with an average price of nearly $30,000, up about $6,800 — or 29% — from a year earlier.
The spike in car prices was a major factor in the largest jump in overall inflation in 39 years. The 7% annual consumer price increase at the end of 2021 would have stood at 5.5% if car prices had remained unchanged.
Taking the pressure off prices
Buying a car is not only a major purchase for most Americans, it's also a surprisingly frequent one. About 40% of US households buy a car every year.
But with the automakers expecting the supply of chips and other parts to improve this year, that should help with inventories, and take the pressure off prices, according to experts. That could lead to a return of consumers paying less than the sticker price, a big break for buyers, even if the price in the window doesn't go down.
"From everything we are looking at, once production is back online in the later half of the year, we should see inventories start to build again," said David Paris, senior manager of market insights at J.D. Power.
For example, J.D. Power forecasts that the average wholesale price of used cars should fall about 9% from the fourth quarter of last year to the fourth quarter of this year, and that prices should continue to decline in 2023. But that won't get prices to where they were before the pandemic.
"Prices will be going down, but they're not going to get to 2019 levels," Paris said.
Pat Ryan, founder and CEO of CoPilot, a car buying app, said that used car prices are already showing signs of decline.
"There is no longer the same upward pressure on prices," he said. But he also ruled out a return to 2019 levels.
"This market can get back to 10% above the pre-Covid pricing, but not all the way back," he said.
Jonathan Smoke, chief economist at Cox Automotive, also believes there will be only a modest decline in used car prices relative to the spike in 2021.
"History tells us that a decline of more than 10% is rare indeed. Why? As prices fall, demand builds," he said. "In 25 years, we have never seen a decline of as much as 13% within a year."
As for the supply of new cars, "inventory levels should improve but remain historically tight," Smoke said.
Surging prices: Key inflation measure hits a 39-year high
Surging prices: Key inflation measure hits a 39-year high
One reason the average purchase price for new cars could continue to climb is that the types of vehicles customers are looking to buy will continue to be more expensive.
Buyers want more safety options, such as automatic braking, cruise control that's capable of slowing the car when the vehicle in front slows as well warnings when cars are in a driver's blind spot. There is also the continued shift towards more expensive SUVs and trucks, and the expectations that new electric vehicle offerings will attract buyers to those models, which are typically more expensive.
All in, that means the average transaction price for new vehicles could continue to edge up, Smoke said, perhaps even faster than overall inflation.

cnn.com
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