Nutson's Weekly Auto News Wrap-up July 9-16, 2023
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Here are Larry's picks among the past week's important, relevant, semi-secret, or snappy automotive news, opinions and insider back stories presented as expertly crafted easy-to-understand automotive universe news nuggets.Nutson's Auto News Weekly Wrap-up July 9-15, 2023. * The average price Americans paid for a new vehicle in June 2023 was 1.6% higher than one year ago, the smallest year-over-year price increase since the start of the global pandemic. According to Kelley Blue Book, a Cox Automotive company, the average transaction price (ATP) of a new vehicle in June was $48,808, a month-over-month increase of 0.3% ($150) from an upwardly revised May reading of $48,658. Compared to the start of the year, however, transaction prices are down 1.7%, or $865, the largest January to June tumble in the past decade. The average price paid for a new, non-luxury vehicle in June was $45,291, up only $17 compared to May. Luxury vehicle prices in June were down more than 2% year over year. The average luxury buyer paid $63,977 last month, up $305 from May. EV prices continue to fall, again led by market leader Tesla. In June, the average EV ATP was $53,438, down from a revised $54,528 in May and down from more than $61,000 in January.
* Bloomberg reports used-car prices in the U.S. fell 4.2% in June from May, the largest drop since the pandemic began, and were down 10.3% from the previous year, as a key measure of inflation eases. The price drop in June was the biggest ever for the month and among the largest in the history of the used-car price index compiled by Manheim, a vehicle auction service. It was the sharpest decline since April 2020, when Manheim's Used-Vehicle Value Index plunged 11.4%.
* Tesla remained the best-selling electric vehicle in the US for the first six months of 2023, Motor Intelligence reports, and Hyundai Motor surpassed General Motors for second place. Tesla sold 336,892 retail and fleet EVs in the first half of the year, followed by Hyundai with 38,457 EVs with GM third at 36,322 vehicles. In fourth place is the VW Groiup and Ford is fifth.
* Joe White writing for Reuters mentions: The EV market situation in the United States has many challenges: EV demand is growing, with help from Tesla’s price chopping. Tesla beat Wall Street’s guesses for quarterly deliveries and Rivian’s second quarter deliveries also outperformed expectations. But EV sales are not growing fast enough to support the sales ambitions of every player. U.S. auto dealers ended June with 100 days’ worth of unsold EVs on their lots, according to WardsAuto. That’s roughly double the levels of inventory Detroit Three executives have said they want in the new, post-COVID, post-supply chain shock world. Detroit executives talk about selling EVs with “no negotiation” and a build-to-order approach. Not with that many vehicles gathering pollen on dealer lots.
* US DoE factoid of the week: The highest EPA-rated fuel economy for model year 2023 was 140 miles per gallon equivalent achieved by two electric vehicle models. In model year 2023, the highest-rated EPA combined fuel economy for gasoline vehicles was about 60 miles per gallon (MPG), while two electric vehicle (EV) models – the Hyundai Ioniq 6 and the Lucid Air – achieved 140 mpg-equivalent (MPGe). MPGe is a unit of measure used by the EPA to represent EV fuel economy in a common unit with gas-powered vehicles, where 33.7 kilowatt-hours of electricity are equal to the energy contained in one gallon of gasoline. From MY 2011 (the year modern mass marketed EVs were introduced) to MY 2023, maximum EV fuel economy has grown 37% while gasoline vehicle fuel economy has increased just 19%.
* The upcoming all-electric Spectre is so popular that Rolls-Royce already is weighing the need to increase production, and it wants to stop buyers from flipping the car for profit. Rolls said anyone who flips the car will be blacklisted from buying another one from a dealer. Pricing starts at $422,750, but with bespoke customization many will transact above $500,000. Rolls says 40 percent of those who have ordered a Spectre are new to the brand. The first year of production of 2500 cars is already sold out. Deliveries start in November 2023.
* American muscle cars with high horsepower and a hot rod image rank among the deadliest vehicles on the road, both for their own drivers and for people in other vehicles, recent calculations by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety show. Six of the 21 vehicles with the highest driver death rates for model year 2020 are variants of the Chevrolet Camaro, Dodge Challenger, Dodge Charger and Ford Mustang, while eight others are small cars or minicars. Eighteen of the 23 vehicles with the lowest driver death rates are minivans or SUVs, and 12 are luxury vehicles. IIHS also calculated the best and worst models according to the number of drivers in other vehicles killed in crashes with them.
Using that lens, the story of big and small is partially reversed, illustrating the danger that large vehicles pose to other road users. The differences in behavior among various demographic groups – especially young men vs older people – complicate the analysis of crash data. Details are here:
* Author's comment: The high horspower muscle car image of representing higher danger is not new. Demographics of the driver play a roll. However, in this regard, the general public is not asking for and does not need mainstream battery electric vehicles with extreme acceleration capabilities. Zero to 60 mph acceleration in 4 or 5 seconds is not necessary in a family car
* Happy Birthday to a living legend. Ed Iskenderian born July 10, 1921 celebrated his 102nd birthday this week. "Isky" is famed for developing many performance advancements for racing engines, most notably the famed Isky cams. Isky is the 2023 winner of the Peter Bryant Challenger Award, presented at the Lions Automobilia Foundation Museum in Los Angeles. SEE ALSO:Tribute To Dick "Goldie" Guldstrand And Other Hot Rodders, SoCal Pioneers of Power & Speed; By Steve Ford, The Car Guy®
* In anticipation of the the new "Barbie" blockbuster coming to theaters later this month, Hagerty Media took a look at the value of the cars in her six-decade plus collection. Corvette remains the queen, but other makes are well represented. Have a read and see the total value:
* The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration announced that Stellantis issued a do-not-drive order for roughly 29,000 2003 Dodge Ram 1500 pickup trucks that are still on the road and have yet to receive repairs to address deadly Takata airbags. The order comes as the result of a death caused by a passenger-side inflator in a 2003 Dodge Ram 1500, the first to occur in this model, and the 26th death directly linked to a faulty Takata airbag. The truck was one of 385,686 Dodge Ram 1500, 2500, and 3500 models first recalled in 2015 over the massive Takata scandal.
* Erich Bitter, an esteemed race car driver, automobile tuner, importer, designer, and car builder reportedly passed away just before his 90th birthday. Born in central western Germany in 1933, Bitter spent much of his childhood at his parent's bicycle shop. With a four-year career in bicycle racing, he became one of the top German riders and formed a close relationship with NSU. It was this partnership that led Bitter to begin driving for NSU by age 25 and it wasn't long before he started dominating the track. His eleven-year racing career stretched from 1958 to 1969. Bitter subsequently formed a business building his own car and provideing design and engineering services to Volkswagen, among others.
Stay safe. Be Well.