Photo via Wikipedia.

Photo via Wikipedia.

Vehicle depreciation rates are expected to keep climbing in 2015, according to a new report from Black Book and Fitch Ratings Inc.

Black Book forecasts new vehicle sales to finish a little above 16.7 million units this year.

Last year the depreciation rate on used vehicles was 12.1 percent, which was lower than the initial forecast. For 2015, depreciation levels are expected to hit 14.5 percent, according to the report.

"2014 depreciation was defined by pockets of volatility due to seasonality, harsh weather patterns and falling fuel prices impacting smaller cars and trucks of all sizes," said Anil Goyal, Black Book's vice president of analytics and strategic partnerships. "Looking ahead, lower consumer demand and CAFE-driven model competition will place higher depreciation pressure on smaller car segments particularly, but trucks should have stable retention in 2015 due to balanced production levels and strong housing and service economies."

Depreciation rates on used vehicles are reaching pre-recession levels. The positive growth in used vehicle markets began in 2009.

Fitch states higher vehicle depreciation in 2015 is not expected to have a significant impact on the performance of automotive asset-backed securities (ABS).

Fitch offers a stable outlook for prime-asset performance and positive forecast for ratings performance, which is consistent with 2014. Residual value (RV) performance of U.S. automotive lease ABS transactions moderated in 2014 with lower gains ending December 2014 at a 3.87 percent gain, down from 7.23 percent a year earlier as vehicle values crept lower during the year while used volume rose.

The report predicts used vehicle inventory levels and lease vehicle returns will continue to increase in 2015 by over 10 percent, along with higher vehicle trade-in volumes. These trends will drive RV losses higher throughout the year, but not impact ratings performance. The outlook for asset and ratings performance for automotive lease ABS is stable for 2015, despite these negative trends.

The Black Book-Fitch vehicle depreciation report is a joint venture by the two companies utilizing Black Book’s used vehicle depreciation data, and Fitch’s U.S. auto ABS indices data.

The Black Book-Fitch Vehicle Depreciation Report is available for download by clicking here.

0 Comments