Driving Today NewsMay 14, 2008 Prices of Used Luxury Cars SlumpPrices for used luxury cars are down this year in the wake of a weakening economy, and this has put a crimp in the profits of luxury-car manufacturers. BMW took a $372 million charge-off from its earnings recently to reflect losses it had taken in the used-vehicle market in the United States. Like many luxury-car makers, BMW relies on leasing for a lot of its “sales,” and it, through a so-called “captive” financing company, finances many of the leases. When the vehicles coming off lease sell for a lower price than was originally predicted -- the “residual price” -- the leasing company ends up eating that loss. According to a report in the trade publication Automotive News, 2005 model-year BMWs coming off lease are selling for some $3,000 less than the value projected when they were delivered to customers initially. Mercedes-Benz models from the 2005 model year are faring even worse -- commanding $4,700 less than initially projected -- and Lexus models from the same year are falling $1,400 short of their projected residual mark. All this means a big hurt for the luxury manufacturers. CNW Marketing Research, an industry observer of lease activities, says the auto industry might be facing a $6 billion loss stemming from errant predictions of future vehicle value this year alone. The industry’s biggest predicament of this kind came in 2001, when finance companies were $10 billion upside down on off-lease vehicles. Next Driving Today News>>More Driving Today NewsLegendary Drives
Nebraska #2
Old Oregon TrailIt seems everything in Nebraska is along straight lines, and you have very few curves in this drive. It is scenic, though, as you follow the North Platte River and The Oregon Trail much of the way. More>>Email Your Host |