Advertisement

Higher used-car prices make new cars attractive

July 1, 2010 at 2:34AM
Advertisement

Prices for used cars are surprisingly high, and in some instances it might be less expensive to purchase a new vehicle, according to auto information company Edmunds.com.

One reason is that automakers often subsidize the interest rate on a loan for a new car. Used-car loan interest rates are typically higher.

Edmunds says this scenario plays out for a number of vehicles, including some luxury cars such as an Audi or a BMW. For example, the payment on a manual-transmission BMW 128 coupe would be $506 a month assuming no down payment and a 60-month loan. The payment on a 1-year-old 128 coupe, also without a down payment, would be $534, Edmunds estimated, based on a review of transaction prices and interest rates.

Overall, Edmunds said, the average price of a 3-year-old car is 11.1 percent higher than it was last year, which it called "a remarkably high year-over-year increase."

Used cars of all ages are 5.5 percent more expensive than they were last year. Typically, the year-over-year increase is less than 3.5 percent, Edmunds said.

LOS ANGELES TIMES

about the writer

about the writer

More from Business

See More
Todd Geselius, vice president of agriculture at the Southern Minnesota Beet Sugar Co-op, shows what a sugar beet looks like when it is harvested in the field on Sept. 9, 2015 in Renville, Minn. (Jim Gehrz/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS) ORG XMIT: 1175088 ORG XMIT: MIN1510142301350530
The Minnesota Star Tribune

Some say the MAHA movement and GLP-1 drugs hurt sugar beet farmers. The White House is blaming former President Joe Biden.

card image
card image
Advertisement