The Buffalo News : Business Today

Saturday, July 4, 2009

subscribe now

08/10/08 06:59 AM

Desperate moves

Story tools:

Some drivers are desperate to flee their fuel costs.

Paula Parent of Blasdell is charged with arranging the disappearance of her leased 2005 Chevy Trailblazer. According to the state Insurance Department, she reported the SUV stolen while accomplices submerged it in Lake Erie, using a rock tied to the gas pedal. She admitted to investigators that she plotted to buy something with better mileage, the insurance department said.

Parent couldn’t be reached to comment Friday.

In the Hudson Valley, Rebecca Williams of Lake Katrine was charged in July with paying an accomplice $500 to stage the theft of her 2005 Chevy Trailblazer, the Insurance Department said. The vehicle was set on fire, and Williams put in a claim for insurance.

While insurance fraud isn’t new,

it’s on the rise as drivers are crunched between falling values and rising gas prices.

“We’re beginning to see more SUVs being stolen and dumped,” said Frank Orlando, director of the Insurance Department’s Fraud Bureau. Rather than try to sell the vehicle, the owner hopes to collect book value from the insurer.

Of course, low prices for sellers mean deals can be had for the buyers still out there.

Tony Helta, general manager of West Herr Ford of Hamburg, said being inhibited from trading in for a new vehicle tends to be more of an issue for people driving late-model vehicles. But with the deals available on new and used SUVs and trucks, those vehicles still have appeal for many people, he said.

The F-150 truck ranked third among used vehicles sold last month by West Herr Automotive Group. The Ford Explorer SUV was fourth, and the Chevy Trailblazer was seventh. And while new passenger car sales were up, sales of new F-150s did not decline much from a year ago, he said.

“A lot of people are going to drive what they want to drive, no matter what the price of fuel is,” Helta said. They also consider factors like winter driving and a vehicle’s utility, he said.

Duane Paddock of Paddock Chevrolet said prices for full-size SUVs and pickup trucks have been moving up in the past six to eight weeks, though not back to where they were several months ago, as gas prices have started to drop.

A gallon of regular unleaded averaged $4.12 Friday in Western New York, according to the AAA Daily Fuel Gauge report. That compares with $4.27 a month ago. A year ago, the average price was $3.03.

While trade-in values for big vehicles are down, GM’s various incentives are helping close the gap on lower trade-in prices and encouraging customers to make deals, Paddock said. “Cash rebates have gone up dramatically,” he said.

Some customers are shifting out of mid-size SUVs into passenger cars or even full-size pickups because the offers on them are attractive, Paddock said.

Do trade-in math

Edmunds.com, an auto research and information Web site, kept getting questions about whether trade-ins made good economic sense. It responded with a “gas guzzler trade-in calculator” on its site. Users plug-in key numbers to determine the payback period and the fuel savings connected to switching to a more fuel-efficient vehicle. (The calculator excludes sales tax.)

Edmunds.com offers an example of an owner who trades in a four-year old GMC Yukon worth $13,483 for a $21,647 Toyota Prius hybrid, a difference of $8,164. If the driver averages 1,200 miles per month and gas is $4.07, which is below the Buffalo Niagara average, the monthly fuel savings would be $201.34. But because the Prius costs much more, the owner would need 41 months to recoup the price difference.

People considering trading in a truck or SUV should take a close look at their options and the financial impact, said Philip Reed, senior consumer advice editor for Edmunds.com. For instance, if a shopper chooses to buy a car with good gas mileage priced comparably to the trade-in value of a SUV or truck — instead of the premium price of a Prius — the owner will start capitalizing on gas savings more quickly, he said.

“Think long and hard before you make a transition just to save some money on gas, and look at the big picture,” Reed said.

Part of that process, he said, involves securing a good trade-in price and not settling for the first offer. “The temptation with trade-ins is to say, “I know it’s going to be ugly and just get it done.’ ”

Reed noted that Edmunds.com was selling a 2007 Chevy Silverado V-8 with a crew cab it had owned as part of its longterm testing fleet. CarMax offered $15,000 for it; a broker later found an offer of $17,500. That was still far below the truck’s purchase price of about $39,000 from just two years ago, but an additional $2,000 or so in trade-in price

can cover a good number of fill-ups, he said.

Avoid panic selling

George Hoffer, an economics professor and automotive expert at Virginia Commonwealth University, said low trade-in values for SUVs and trucks can pose a problem for owners who want to make a change.

“It’s very hard for anyone to do anything right now because they’re so upside down, which could prevent some people from making a terrible mistake,” he said.

Hoffer suggests vehicle owners in that situation who are tempted to trade-in to “stick it out” despite the pain of high gas prices. “Things can only get better,” he said.

Relatively speaking, McNaughton of Cheektowaga is one of the lucky ones. He doesn’t have to sell his truck to cut costs. He can share his fiancee’s Honda Civic for many trips. For limited driving, his Jeep’s 21-22 mpg highway performance, 16-17 mpg in the city, isn’t a budget- breaker.

But as the 27-year-old begins to look for a house, he’d like to extinguish the truck loan to strengthen his credit.

“It’ll free up $280 a month,” he said. Plus what he spends on gasoline.

fwilliams@buffnews.com mglynn@buffnews.com


Buffalo News Video


Breaking News Video

Breaking 24 Hour News

more >>

More Business & Finance Stories

Most Popular, Last 24 Hours