New ADESA Auction Inventory Index
ADESA Analytical Services has developed an auction inventory index to serve as a gauge of wholesale used vehicle market conditions. It is based on the level of auction inventories around the country.
ADESA Analytical Services has developed an auction inventory index to serve as a gauge of wholesale used vehicle market conditions. It is based on the level of auction inventories around the country. Manufacturers and their captive finance arms are the major users of auction storage lots for marshalling vehicles that will be remarketed in the near future.
The index shows the build-up in auction inventories by manufacturers and their captive finance arms during the post-Sept. 11 period last year. This was when wholesale prices and conversion rates fell sharply, and the index captures the “bubble” of vehicles at that time, especially the off-rental program vehicles processed by the automotive manufacturers. As the bubble was worked off from January through April of this year, prices and conversion rates improved. The index shows that since April, inventory levels have again climbed to last year’s levels. As a result, soft price conditions for the remainder of 2002 are anticipated.
The index also reminds remarketers that “no-sale-ing” units at auction usually is a no-win strategy. Not only does a remarketer forego today’s dollar for what quite possibly will be a lower dollar in the future (due to vehicle depreciation, interest expense, and the time value of money, as well as market conditions), but also the no-saled unit remains in the wholesale channel as another unit of supply. This factor adds to the downward pressure on prices that exists during periods of oversupply. Auctions are market-clearing devices and it usually pays to take full advantage of that characteristic by selling vehicles the first time they’re presented to dealers in the auction lanes.
More Operations

Used EVs Strengthen Overall Electric Vehicle Market
The latest sales data point to several reasons for the divergent trends in new and used EVs that can factor into fleet cycling decisions.
Read More →
The Data-Driven Haul: 5 Ways AI is Leveling the Playing Field in Auto Transport
Large and small transport fleets are becoming more competitive as predictive analytics and real-time data inform the logistics decision chain.
Read More →
How to Speak the Same Language on Fleet Safety
Drivers, supervisors, and data often speak different safety “languages.” Getting on the same page will drive better results.
Read More →
2026 CAR Awards Celebrate Industry Excellence
CAR’s annual Fleet Remarketing Awards opened a reimagined 2026 conference designed to bridge the worlds of fleet management and automotive remarketing.
Read More →
The Predictive Pivot: How AI and Data Are Redefining Auto Logistics in 2026
AI is no longer a luxury but the baseline for profitability in 2026. Auto haulers that adopt these tools now will quickly outpace those using manual workflows and taking a wait-and-see approach.
Read More →
The Predictive Pivot: How AI and Data Are Redefining Auto Logistics in 2026
AI is no longer a luxury but the baseline for profitability in 2026. Auto haulers that adopt these tools now will quickly outpace those that use manual workflows or take a wait-and-see approach.
Read More →
CAR 2026 Recap Part 2: Closing the Gap Between Data & Remarketing Value
The second half of CAR 2026 examined how fleets can translate lifecycle strategy, vehicle data, and market shifts into higher real-world results.
Read More →
CAR2026 in Two Words: Velocity, Value (Part 1)
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.
Read More →
CAR 2026: Get the Wall Street Update on the Key Players in Remarketing
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.
Read More →
CAR 2026 Session to Uncover the Missing Data That's Costing Fleets at Disposal
Work trucks lose value at remarketing, not because they aren't worth more, but because the data to prove it rarely makes it to the auction.
Read More →