I am sure there is more to this at the moment. The used car market prices in general are extremely buoyant at the moment; and yet there are 1000s more cars being released into the market than usual (due to various reasons mainly associated with the pandemic).Pbondar said:As they say the market is the market, if people are willing to pay then the prices go up..in economics you only need a small excess of demand over supply for prices to move far!
Two months ago I ended a lease early on a 2019 Volvo V90 due to not using it for the past 12 months. The car was supposedly going to auction the same week but has not appeared anywhere for sale as yet.
I recently also bought another car (not the Z4) which was serviced on 20th October 2020 at 10,242 miles. I bought it on 30th March 2021 and it had 10,245 miles. The car has been "stored" for over 5 months as it was not for sale until recently!
I think the car industry in general is storing vast numbers of used cars and drip-feeding them into the market to save an over-supply and therefore inevitably a price crash and potential impact on new car sales.
There is definitely something going on in the used car market at present.


