Macro-financial risk
2026-04-26
10 minute read
18 sources
The American Car Squeeze: Affordability, Delinquency, and the Auto Credit Cycle
New vehicle average transaction prices held near 48,000 dollars through 2024 and 2025, the Manheim Used Vehicle Value Index settled around 205 after retracing from its 280 peak, and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York logged the highest auto loan transition into serious delinquency since the 2010 vintage. Section 232 tariffs on Mexican and Canadian autos and a 20 percent jump in auto insurance CPI compounded the affordability problem. The credit cycle now hinges on subprime ABS performance, repossession economics, and the policy response to a household stretched on the second-largest line item after housing.
American household balance sheets now carry 1.66 trillion dollars of auto loan debt, the second-largest non-housing consumer credit line on the Federal Reserve Bank of New York Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit. Cox Automotive reported a new vehicle average transaction price of 48,397 dollars in December 2024, roughly 12 perce...