ADESA Promotes Caggiano, Stevens to Executive Vice President of U.S. Operations Roles
ADESA announced that Mike Caggiano and Pat Stevens have been promoted to the roles of executive vice president of U.S. auction operations, effective immediately.
by Staff
March 18, 2013
CAGGIANO
2 min to read
ADESA announced that Mike Caggiano and Pat Stevens have been promoted to the roles of executive vice president of U.S. auction operations, effective immediately. Both will continue to report directly to Tom Caruso, president and CEO.
“Mike and Pat are vehicle remarketing veterans with proven track records for delivering results for our customers and our company,” said Caruso. “They have worked in various capacities both at the auction level and in key management roles and bring diverse skill sets to these positions. I look forward to their continued leadership of our U.S. auction operations.”
Ad Loading...
CAGGIANO
Caggiano, who will serve as executive vice president of ADESA’s eastern region, began his remarketing career in 1985 at a Massachusetts-based leasing company. He joined ADESA Boston in 1996 as sales manager. Then, in 2000, he opened ADESA Concord, a greenfield site in Acton, Mass., and served as the auction's general manager. Caggiano most recently served as regional vice president of ADESA’s eastern region, a position he held since 2007.
STEVENS
Stevens, who will serve as executive vice president of ADESA’s western region, brings nearly two decades of remarketing experience to his role. He has worked in a number of management positions for both ADT and ADESA, including general manager of ADESA Dallas. In 2007, he was promoted to regional vice president, western region. Stevens was most recently regional vice president of ADESA’s central region, a position he held since 2008. He has also served as a NAAA Zone President and a member of other NAAA committees.
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.