Auto Rental News
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Wholesale Used Vehicle Price Trend Reverses Course in August

The sales conversion rate also increased last month and ended at a level higher than typical for August, indicating buyers have become more aggressive than they were in June and July.

September 8, 2021
Wholesale Used Vehicle Price Trend Reverses Course in August

Price Changes For Selective Market Classes, YOY% change August 2021

Graphic: Cox/Manheim

4 min to read


Wholesale used vehicle prices (on a mix-, mileage-, and seasonally adjusted basis) decreased 0.4% month over month in August, according to a news release from Cox Automotive based on the Manheim Used Vehicle Value Index.

The decrease brought the index to 194.5, a 19% increase from a year ago. The seasonal adjustment caused the monthly decline as the non-seasonally adjusted average price increased 1.4% in August, which left unadjusted prices up 20% year over year. In recent years, August has seen large vehicle value increases, which is why the seasonal adjustment is producing the lower value when the market is seeing real prices rise.

Ad Loading...

Manheim Market Report (MMR) values saw changing trends in August that resulted in stable prices and then accelerating weekly increases. Over the last four weeks, the Three-Year-Old Index increased a net 2.1%. During August, MMR Retention, which is the average difference in price relative to current MMR, averaged 100%; but the first weekday of the month saw 98.8% retention, while the final weekday saw 100.9% retention, which means that market prices are now ahead of MMR values when they started the month below. The sales conversion rate also increased last month and ended at a level higher than typical for August, indicating buyers have become more aggressive than they were in June and July.

On a year-over-year basis, all major market segments saw seasonally adjusted price increases in August. Vans and sport utility vehicles had the largest year-over-year performance, while the remaining car and pickup segments lagged the overall market. On a month-over-month basis, the compact car and pickup segments saw declines, while the remaining segments saw modest growth.

Vehicle sales fall: According to Cox Automotive estimates, total used vehicle sales were down 12% year over year in August. Cox estimates the August used SAAR to be 36.7 million, down from 41.6 million last August and flat compared to July’s 36.7 million SAAR. The August used retail SAAR estimate is 20.1 million, down from 22 million last year and flat month over month.

Using a rolling seven-day estimate of used retail days’ supply based on vAuto data, we see that used retail supply peaked at 114 days on April 8, 2020. Normal used retail supply is about 44 days’ supply. It ended August at 40 days, which is below normal levels. Cox estimates that wholesale supply peaked at 149 days on April 9, 2020, when normal supply is 23. It ended August at 19 days. 

August total new vehicle sales were down 17% year over year, with one less selling day compared to August 2020. Month over month, August new vehicle sales were down 15%. The August SAAR came in at 13.1 million, a decrease from last year’s 15.2 million and August 2019’s 17.1 million rate.

Ad Loading...

Combined sales into large rental, commercial, and government buyers were up 11% year over year in August. Sales into rental increased 118% year-over-year in August and are up 7% compared to the same time period last year. Commercial sales are down 4% year-over-year in August and are up 17% year-to-date 2021 versus 2020. Including an estimate for fleet deliveries into the dealer and manufacturer channel, Cox estimates the remaining retail sales were down 19% year over year in August, leading to an estimated retail SAAR of 11.5 million, which was down from 13 million last August and down from August 2019’s 13.8 million rate.

Rental risk pricing rises: The average price for rental risk units sold at auction in August was up 18% year-over-year. Rental risk prices were up 13% compared to July. Average mileage for rental risk units in August (at 70,00 miles) was up 78% compared to a year ago but down 20% month-over-month.

August brings clear declines in consumer sentiment: Consumer Confidence according to the Conference Board declined 9% in August and left confidence down 14.2% compared to February 2020. Plans to purchase a vehicle in the next six months declined to the lowest level in three months but remained higher than a year ago. Plans to purchase a home also declined to the lowest level in three months and were unchanged year-over-year. Measures of consumer sentiment from the University of Michigan and the index of consumer sentiment from Morning Consult also showed declines in August. The Morning Consult index declined 5.5% in July and ended August down another 3.1%. That left sentiment down 19.5% from Feb. 29, 2020.

Download the data file.

Originally posted on Vehicle Remarketing

More Remarketing

A temple scene from Okinawa, Japan.

Surprice Opens Two Rental Branches In Japan

The launch highlights the global car rental operation’s growing presence in Asia.

Read More →
Blue bar graphs showing a rise in used vehicle categories across the board.
Remarketingby News/Media ReleaseMarch 6, 2026

Wholesale Used Vehicle Prices Up In February

Solid demand at Manheim auctions with higher sales conversion rates indicate an appetite from dealers to buy.

Read More →
Green and black bar graphs showing YOY shifts in February fleet sales.
Fleet Acquisitionby Martin RomjueMarch 5, 2026

Rental Fleet Sales Slow In February Ending A Strong Streak

Commercial fleets posted the most gains, sustaining increases in monthly and year-to-date fleet sales

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Rental cars lined up in front of an Avis-Budget storefront outlet.
Rental Operationsby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 20, 2026

Avis Budget Group Reports Near $1 Billion Loss Tied To 2025 EV Fleet Write-Down

Following Hertz, the company is the second global car rental conglomerate to sustain sizable losses due to lower customer demand and usage of electric rental cars.

Read More →
An orange and purple bar graph shows average rental car prices and mileage levels from October 2024 to October 2025.
RemarketingJanuary 16, 2026

2025 Rental Vehicle Remarketing Summary And Outlook

The year brought modest and flatter results across wholesale values, total off-rental supply, and rental risk units.

Read More →
AuctionNet summary table of Dec. 25 auction vehicle sales with three columns.
Fleet Acquisitionby News/Media ReleaseJanuary 13, 2026

Auctions Record Highest Vehicle Sales Since 2019

2025 figures show a steady recovery in wholesale vehicle activity this decade.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
A black CUV tilted downward on stacks of descending gold coins.
Rental Operationsby News/Media ReleaseDecember 29, 2025

DriveItAway Holdings, Free2move Launch Operations In Nine Cities

The co-branded program with Stellantis’ mobility division scales up leasing and financing options nationwide with more cities to come online in 2026.

Read More →
An import duties stamp and stamper superimposed on a flat American flag.
Remarketingby Martin RomjueDecember 26, 2025

Tariffs, Digital Tech, Industry Stats Among Top 10 Remarketing Topics for 2025

The annual look at most-consumed vehicle remarketing content shows what audiences think mattered the most in the mid-decade year.

Read More →
A multicolored row of vertical bar graphs showing the U.S. car rental industry's total revenue, fleet vehicle purchases, and rental cars in service 2015-2025.
Rental Operationsby Martin RomjueDecember 22, 2025

U.S. Car Rental Revenue Crosses $40 Billion

A modest rise in rental car usage and an increase in fleet purchases kept the industry on a steady upward path at mid-decade.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Summary list of U.S. wholesale vehicle auction activity for November 2025.
Remarketingby News/Media ReleaseDecember 10, 2025

Commercial Vehicles Drive November Wholesale Auction Sales

Much of the increase came from rental fleets remarketing large amounts of 2-year-old cars.

Read More →
Ad Loading...