• William
  • News
  • 6 minutes to read

Looming Tariffs Caused An April ‘Bank Run’ On Car Dealers

Free IVF, DOGE checks, and a lot of the other stuff Trump said he’d deliver if elected may not be happening, but the tariffs he promised sure are. With ports largely empty and store shelves soon to follow suit, there’s only so much you can do to prepare before everything gets significantly more expensive. One thing Americans have done in droves, though, is buy cars. In fact, the number of people rushing to buy cars last month before tariffs hit basically amounted to a “bank run” at car dealers, Automotive News reports. 

Not every dealer benefited equally, but almost across the board, year-over-year auto sales jumped significantly in April. Toyota saw an 8% increase, while Ford sales were up about 15%, Honda’s were up nearly 17%, Hyundai’s were up nearly 19%, and even Mazda’s sales climbed a full 21%. Subaru, however, appears to be a notable outlier among mainstream automakers, seeing its sales climb only 0.3%. Some luxury automakers saw even larger sales gains than their mainstream counterparts, too, with Lincoln’s year-over-year April sales up a whopping 40%, Acura’s up 33%, and Lexus’s up nearly 24%. Heck, even Volvo saw sales jump more than 5%. 

Automotive analysis firm Motor Intelligence pegged April’s seasonally adjusted, annualized sales rate at 17.3 million sales, which was slightly less than March’s 17.8 million, but that’s still the first back-to-back months with a SAAR higher than 17 million since 2020. 

Tariff fears abound

Ask AutoNews owners Cox Automotive’s chief economist Jonathan Smoke why car sales are up so much, and his answer isn’t surprising: it’s the entirely reasonable fear that tariffs are about to make the cars people want a lot more expensive. “It’s led to a surge in sales as consumers rush to buy before vehicles are completely impacted by the tariffs that have already been announced and gone into play,” Smoke told the audience during an online Automotive Press Association presentation. 

That said, the sales boost was also uneven. It started in late March when Trump first announced automotive tariffs and actually peaked in early April before dropping off later in the month. He also doesn’t see sales getting any better any time soon, saying, “It looks like the market has hit a ceiling, and I would argue that it has, and that ceiling has tight supply and higher prices. Unlike in 2021, the consumer is unable and unwilling to continue buying cars at any price. The industry and the White House are about to get a lesson in what economists call price elasticity.”

Smoke isn’t the only one sounding the alarm, either. As Toyota’s North American boss Dave Christ told AutoNews, “Somewhere around the end of March, there was what amounted to a run on the bank. The first couple days in April was a frenzy, then it slowed to a more normal pace. It could be we pulled forward all the business that was there, because that frenzied pace is not a frenzy anymore.”

No certainty after May

If you’ve been thinking seriously about buying a new car soon, the good news is, you haven’t necessarily missed the boat. Dealers may have had great months in April overall, but especially with sales drying up in the latter half of the month, they may be more likely to make a deal. And while it’s hard to tell how bad things will get over the summer, many automakers such as Hyundai, Mini and Volkswagen have announced price guarantees through the end of May to at least give car buyers a little more certainty. 

But while you should still be able to get a decent deal on a vehicle, you may not get to be as picky as you’d like due to limits on inventory. In fact, according to Toyota’s Christ, a lack of inventory is part of what held the automaker back last month. The Japanese car company had an 11.8-day supply at the beginning of April and ended the month with an 11.4-day supply. “So every car that came in went out,” he told AutoNews. “If we had more [vehicles] on the ground, I think we would have sold a little more.”

Subaru, apparently, ran into the same issue, with Troy Poston, Subaru of America’s head of sales, telling AutoNews, “Sales were still strong for April, but we had very low inventory, which was a bit of a hangover from our best-ever sales month of March. That left us with less than a 30-day supply of vehicles and even lower days’ supply on some of our key product lines.”

Very soon, inventory levels could be as bad as they were during the worst of COVID, or perhaps even lower, with prices only going up. “We could easily get back to 2022 levels of days’ supply very soon — and by soon, I mean within the next three to four weeks,” Smoke told AutoNews. “And remember that going forward, all of the inventory refreshes that we see over the next several weeks will be vehicles that are exposed to tariffs.”


Source: http://www.jalopnik.com/1851655/car-sales-impact-dealerships-april-tariff-price-increases/

Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
guest

Once Again, We’re Begging You Not To Shoot Lost Drivers Simply Turning Around Or Asking For Directions

State Police arrested Chester, New York highway superintendent John J. Reilly — relationship to actor John C. Reilly...

If You Were President For A Day, What Transportation-Related Executive Order Would You Sign?

President Donald Trump has signed 143 executive orders since starting his second term in January. Considering he has...

The German Response to Electric Mobility Challenges: Volkswagen ID.4 Redefines Mass-Market EV Excellence

The Volkswagen ID.4 represents far more than simply another entry into the increasingly crowded electric SUV marketplace. This...

Silverado EV Beats Lucid Air In Long-Range Electric Title Fight

Chevrolet's Silverado EV Work Truck base model delivers more miles of electric range than any other EV on...

Redesigned 2026 Jeep Compass Is Now A Hybrid Or EV With Up To 375 HP

Americans may love crossovers more than we should, but it isn't like other countries aren't susceptible to their...

Ram Introduces $44,495 Express Model, Hoping A Cheaper Truck Will Combat Sales Slump

Ram has had a pretty tough go of it lately, with U.S. deliveries for the Stellantis truck brand...

Toyota Corolla Hatchback FX Edition Adds Perfect, Beautiful White Wheels

We enthusiasts are constantly clamoring for better colors on our cars, but too few automakers are willing to...

I Would Die For The Adorable 500-HP Electric Telo Minitruck That Will Almost Definitely Never Get Built

I don't know if you've heard or not, but small is back in style. Full-size pickup trucks are...

Jaguar Land Rover Is Shipping Cars To The U.S. Again, Not That You Were Going To Buy One Anyway

I've got some very good news for the handful of you who were looking forward to buying a...

Europeans Are Refusing To Buy Teslas As Sales Crater

Tesla's sales in Germany and the United Kingdom are so dismal they are pretty much becoming a statistically...

Sustainable Development and Green Technologies in the Automotive Industry: How Environmental Initiatives Are Transforming the Sector

The automotive industry stands at the epicenter of one of the most profound environmental transformations in modern industrial...

The Future of Electric Vehicles: Revolutionary Battery Technologies and Advanced Charging Infrastructure

The electric vehicle revolution stands at a pivotal moment in automotive history, driven by unprecedented advancements in battery...

The Best All-Season Tires For 2025, According To Tyre Reviews

As much as enthusiasts on the internet would love to argue they should, most people just don't like...

Newark Airport Chaos Caused By Failing 1980s Technology

With hundreds of delays and cancellations over the past week, flying out of Newark-Liberty International Airport has been...

Starbase, Texas Now Officially Company Town For Elon Musk’s SpaceX

It's now within the realm of possibility that SpaceX could be paid in crypto company scrip because Elon...

You Can’t Buy Anything From Ford For $30,000 Anymore Because Of Tariffs

With a new round of tariff-induced price hikes and a facelift for 2025 Ford had pushed the price of...

Stop Feeding F/A-18 Hornets To The Red Sea No Matter How Hungry It Claims To Be

The USS Harry S. Truman lost an F/A-18 Super Hornet worth more than $60 million in the Red...

New Grand Theft Auto VI Trailer Promises Exploding Cars, Cool Old Trucks, And ‘Fast And Furious’ Shoutouts

Rockstar Games delayed "Grand Theft Auto VI" to "mid-2026" last week, but today we get our consolation prize: A new...

Nothing Radicalizes You Against Dirty Diesels Like Riding A Motorcycle

Zero recently dropped off an S for me to test, and now that put a few hundred miles...

Looming Tariffs Caused An April ‘Bank Run’ On Car Dealers

Free IVF, DOGE checks, and a lot of the other stuff Trump said he'd deliver if elected may...