Although bidding activity has begun to slow down after weeks of increased lane activity after the recent hurricanes, overall segment depreciation remains at steady levels, according to Black Book’s Oct. 9 Market Insights report.
by Staff
October 10, 2017
Courtesy of Black Book.
1 min to read
Courtesy of Black Book.
Although bidding activity has begun to slow down after weeks of increased lane activity after the recent hurricanes, overall segment depreciation remains at steady levels, according to Black Book’s Oct. 9 Market Insights report.
Within the car segment, subcompact and luxury cars emerged as the top performers last week. And, within the truck segment, subcompact crossovers and full-size vans claimed that same title.
Ad Loading...
“Small and mid-size cars are continuing to do well, even as the buying frenzy after the hurricanes has slowed down,” said Anil Goyal, senior vice president of automotive valuation and analytics.
Last week the average wholesale value of the subcompact car segment decreased by 0.17% while luxury cars saw values decline by 0.19%. The biggest decline came from the near-luxury segment, which experienced a week-to-week decline of 0.71% in average wholesale value, according to Black Book.
During the same time frame, subcompact crossovers and full-size vans saw average wholesale values increase by 0.03% and 0.02%, respectively. The worst-performing vehicle segment during the week was the compact van segment, with saw its value decline 0.90% from the week before.
Overall, volume-weighted, car segment values declined 0.40% last week, compared to 0.38% the week before. Overall, truck segment values declined by 0.28%, compared to 0.17% the previous week.
The 2026 Conference of Automotive Remarketing convened with a mandate to involve a new constituency — fleet managers — and an updated mission to demonstrate unrealized value in de-fleeted vehicles.
From a Wall Street analyst's take on remarketing's key players to whether fleets need their own version of Carfax, CAR 2026's afternoon roundtables will answer key operational and industry questions.
The enhanced technology allows rental car operations, dealerships, and auctions to compare a vehicle’s condition at pickup and drop-off within the same rental or loaner record.
A panel at the 2026 Conference of Automotive Remarketing will examine how resale value is created across the vehicle lifecycle and which traditional remarketing practices still deliver ROI.
Smart operational and spec'ing decisions can dramatically improve both the total cost of ownership during use and the resale value when it's time to remarket day cabs.
How can vehicle-sourced performance data change the way fleets assess condition, time de-fleets, and set remarketing expectations? A seminar at the 2026 Conference of Automotive Remarketing (CAR) has answers.