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Don't Even Think About Buying A Used Car Over This Summer

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car-fall

Used car prices, after rising sharply this year, are starting to fall.

But experts advise waiting until later this year to buy a vehicle to take advantage of the best deals.

Small and midsize used cars will drop in value by 5 percent during June, predicts analyst Jonathan Banks of the NADA Used Car Guides. 

Prices for all used cars are forecast to decline about 2 percent next month, with the decrease driven largely by the falling cost of gas. Banks cites the example of the 2009 Toyota Camry, which saw its price rise 15 percent, to $13,325, from January to May. He expects the value of that same Camry to decline by $675, or 5 percent, in June. 

But that vehicle and other used cars will be cheaper still by this autumn, says senior market analyst Alex Gutierrez of Kelley Blue Book's kbb.com website. He expects prices to continue to drop 2  to 3 percent a month until fall.

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This is the second straight year in which used car prices have spiked. The 2011 Japanese earthquake and tsunami, which resulted in a shortage of some new cars, combined with rising gas prices to push up used car values. This year, gas prices surged early in the year to a peak national average cost of $3.93 a gallon for regular, according to the AAA fuel gauge. But now, with crude oil prices declining, that figure was down to $3.57 this week.

In addition, a long-term supply problem for used cars is beginning to be solved. Starting with the financial crisis in 2008, fewer new cars were sold or leased. In recent years, that resulted in a shortage of trade-ins or off-lease cars in the used car market. But rising new-car sales, expected to top 14 million this year in the U.S., are today boosting the used car supply with trade-ins.

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