FI showroom red and grey logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Black Book: Small Crossovers and Cars Have Strong Week

After four weeks of living below 0.37%, the depreciation rate for the truck segment reached its highest level in February — and its second-highest this year — last week, according to Black Book’s Feb. 27 Market Insights report.

by Staff
February 28, 2017
1 min to read


LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. — After four weeks of living below 0.37%, the depreciation rate for the truck segment reached its highest level in February — and its second-highest this year — last week, according to Black Book’s Feb. 27 Market Insights report.

Volume-weighted, wholesale values for the truck segment fell by 0.48% last week, compared to 0.27% the week before. Depreciation was highest for minivans, compact luxury crossover/SUVs, and full-size vans, with their values declining 0.72%, 0.69%, and 0.63%, respectively.

Ad Loading...

Alternatively, the subcompact crossover, subcompact luxury crossover, and compact van segments showed pricing strength, with wholesale values increasing 0.42%, 0.10%, and 0.07%, respectively.

“Small cars and crossovers performed the best among all segments last week, driven by higher interest from tax season buyers,” said Anil Goyal, senior vice president of Automotive Valuation and Analytics.

Volume-weighted, overall car segment values declined by 0.54% last week, compared to 0.46% in the previous week.

Subcompact, compact, and mid-size cars recorded the lowest depreciation rates among all car segments, with values declining by 0.23%, 0.23%, and 0.22%, respectively. Luxury and prestige luxury cars continued to struggle, registering the highest depreciation rates among all vehicle segments at 0.80% and 0.91%, respectively.

More Auto Finance

Auto Financeby Lauren LawrenceFebruary 23, 2026

Auto Loan Forecast Bucks Market Trend

Auto loan originations rose over 6% year-over-year in the third quarter of 2025, but TransUnion predicts a slight decline in auto loan growth this year, making it an outlier in the company's overall lending forecast.

Read More →
Auto Financeby Hannah MitchellFebruary 11, 2026

Auto Credit More Plentiful

Growing access shows greater lender appetite for risk as consumers take on heavier debt burden in an inflated market.

Read More →
Auto Financeby Hannah MitchellJanuary 27, 2026

Auto Loans Long as Stretch Limos

More consumers, faced with ever-rising car prices, are adapting by agreeing to longer loan terms despite the cost of added interest payments.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
A person holds a stack of cash with a small red toy car on top.
Auto Financeby StaffJanuary 20, 2026

AutoPayPlus Launches RePayPlus

The reinsured biweekly payment program offers auto dealers with customer retention and reinsurance structure.

Read More →
F&Iby Hannah MitchellJanuary 12, 2026

Auto Credit Access Loosens

December brought some of the best borrowing availability for consumers in years, though lenders tightened their reins on riskier segments of the market.

Read More →
A hand holding small burlap money bags next to a toy red car, symbolizing auto financing, loan payments, and dealership profitability.
Industryby StaffNovember 14, 2025

Report Uncovers $4.7B Opportunity for Auto Dealers

Solving mismatched payment quotes can boost sales, profits

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Industryby Hannah MitchellNovember 10, 2025

Auto Loans More in Reach

October easier to tap despite approval rates falling

Read More →
Industryby Hannah MitchellNovember 3, 2025

Q3 Auto Loans Reveal Stress

Data reflect growing finance activity on the extreme ends of credit risk scale

Read More →
Industryby Hannah MitchellOctober 15, 2025

Debt-Strapped Auto Consumers on the Rise

The amounts owed on under-water trade-ins reach new highs.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
F&Iby Hannah MitchellOctober 10, 2025

Helping the Credit-Crunched

Though many auto consumers are finding it challenging to trade, dealers can leverage conditions to help them get over the hump.

Read More →