Dealers are retailing one-in-every-four used cars too cheaply reports INDICATA

The used car market is moving at such a pace that dealers are retailing one-in-four cars too cheaply according to INDICATA.

The used car market is moving at such a pace that dealers are retailing one-in-four cars too cheaply according to INDICATA.

Analysing dealer used car market prices in real time the INDICATA platform is identifying cars every day that sit shy of current market values due to not being re-priced since dealers re-opened for business on 12 April.

At times like this, maximising revenue on each unit is imperative as sourcing a replacement is getting harder on a weekly basis which is where INDICATA insights are helping dealers.

Many used car prices in stock either remain static or being marked down while market prices are rising, and demand exceeds supply.

Out of the 11,643 models on Autorola’s platform, prices on 11,175 cars rose at the end of May, while 354 remained static and just 114 fell in price.

Jon MitchellJon Mitchell, INDICATA’s sales director said: “From a consumer’s perspective when a used car looks too cheap during an online search, they immediately think it has been wrongly described, or it is likely to have been sold.

“Dealers have to stay in tune with current market prices to help build consumer confidence with online buyers. And for the past few weeks that has meant checking market values daily and then putting up rather than reducing prices,” he added.

Two recent examples where dealers increased prices:

  • A Ford Fiesta listed at £6,995 sat at 94% of its market price after 35 days in stock. The dealer planned to reduce it but as the average market price had risen to £7,436 we advised them to increase the price by £500. The car sold that weekend at screen price.
  •  A BMW 5-Series was listed for sale by a franchised dealer at £29,500. After 50 days in stock, it had been reduced four times to £27,000. In this time the market price had fallen and then increased to £29,500. The dealer car was cheaper than its competition and looked out of kilter on its website, so INDICATA encouraged them to increase the car back to £29,500 which went against the dealer’s gut instinct. Four days after increasing the price it sold.