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New Vehicle Inventory Drops, But Availability Steadies

Despite lower production, there are more vehicles ready to be sold due to sales losing momentum since June.

September 15, 2021
New Vehicle Inventory Drops, But Availability Steadies

National Days' Supply by Brand, August 2021

Graph: Cox Automotive

4 min to read


The total volume of new-vehicle inventory declined again in August, as automakers continue to struggle with production due to the computer chip shortage, according to a Cox Automotive analysis of vAuto Available Inventory data released Sept. 15. The days’ supply has been holding steady over the past month.

The total U.S. supply of available unsold new vehicles stood at 1.08 million vehicles as August closed. That was down from 1.11 million vehicles in late July, but recent data reviews show supply inching higher but mostly because sales are slowing significantly.

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Still, inventories remain historically low, running about 57% below a year ago, according to a Cox Automotive analysis. In raw numbers, supply is down about 1.4 million units from the same time in 2020 and more than 2.5 million units below the 2019 level.

The days’ supply of unsold new vehicles was 31 as September opened. Since mid-July, the days’ supply has been 30 to 31. Days’ supply was 47% below the same week in 2020.

The Cox Automotive days’ supply is based on the daily sales rate for the most recent 30-day period. New-vehicle sales have been losing momentum since June. The August sales pace, or seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR), dropped to 13.1 million, down from 14.8 million in July. By comparison, first-half sales were running at a blistering 17 million pace.

Non-luxury inventory again fell well below one million vehicles near the end of August for a 30 days’ supply. Luxury vehicle supply fell to just under 163,000 units at the close of the month from about 190,000 units the month earlier.

“New-vehicle inventory is stabilizing a bit,” said Cox Automotive Senior Economist Charlie Chesbrough, in a news release. “Days of supply has been holding steady because sales have slowed to such a pace that low supply is not being drawn down as rapidly.”

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Added Chesbrough: “It is hard to see the situation changing in the near term as many automakers have made announcements of additional production cuts of late.”

Most notably Toyota announced it was slashing global production by 40% for September and recently stated it would also slash October’s planned production by the same amount.

Prices Climb at a Slower Rate

As September opened, the average listing price for new vehicles set another record. It rose to $42,450, up from $41,840 a month earlier. That puts it 10% higher than year-ago levels and 16% higher than 2019. The non-luxury average listing price was $39,182 as August closed, up from $38,483 a month earlier. For luxury vehicles, the average listing price was $62,012, up from $60,069.

It’s a fundamental economic principle that high demand and low supply result in rising prices. In addition, August and September typically are months when automakers and dealers try to sell down old inventory at greatly discounted prices to make room for the new model year products. This year, however, there is no old, discounted inventory to pull down the average price.

Across the price spectrum, the days supply for vehicles under $20,000 was lowest at 21 followed by the $20,000 to $30,000 category at a 24 days’ supply and 27 days’ supply for the $30,000 to $40,000 category. Higher priced segments were 30 days’ supply and higher.

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Toyota, Honda Have Lowest Supply

Despite relentlessly low supply, Toyota had been mostly spared from massive production cuts earlier in the year. But that ended as fall approached when the Japanese automaker announced it would cut 40% from planned global production schedules for September and October.

Toyota closed August with 19 days’ supply. Lexus was at 21. Their high-volume models got hit hard. Lexus’ volume-leading RX SUV had a scant 14 days’ supply as September opened. At Toyota brand, the CH-R had about the lowest days’ supply of any model at nine days. Other Toyota volume models – Camry, Corolla, Highlander, Prius, RAV4 and Tacoma – had days’ supply in the teens. Toyota is building up its supply of the full-size Tundra pickup which is launching now in a redesigned form.

The Honda brand was in the same position with a days’ supply of 22. The Civic, CR-V and Ridgeline had 17 days’ supply or less. Accord had only slightly more at about 24 days’ supply. Civic, CR-V and Accord account for the bulk of Honda brand sales.

Kia fell between Toyota and Honda in the inventory rankings with only 20 days’ supply. The new Carnival minivan and Telluride SUV each had a skimpy 16 days’ supply.

Last week, GM warned investors that sales and production declines would be worse than expected in the second half, off 200,000 units – double what GM told investors in July – due to Southeast Asia supply chain issues. Its GMC and Chevrolet brands took the brunt with days’ supply even lower than Subaru.

Originally posted on Vehicle Remarketing

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