This edition of the Auto Market Weekly Summary includes updates on new-vehicle pricing, auto credit availability, consumer credit, and the minutes from the June Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. The conflict in the Middle East intensified this past week as the ceasefire came to an end, adding fresh uncertainty to an already complex economic backdrop.

Bottom Line Up Front

The collapse of the ceasefire in the Middle East reestablished the conflict as the dominant risk heading into the second half of 2026. The renewed uncertainty pushed the 10-year treasury yield back toward 4.56% by Friday (July 10) after ending the previous week below 4.5%, as investors repriced inflation risk for the second half of the year.

The June FOMC minutes confirmed the Fed has moved decisively away from an easing bias, with the 12–0 vote to hold rates steady and a new closing statement signaling a harder line on inflation. Fed funds futures have moved in response: Markets now assign greater than 50% probability to a rate hike by September 2026, with the outlook also tilting toward an additional hike in spring 2027.

Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh also announced the leadership of his five-policy task forces this week — assembling a notable roster of outside economists and former central bankers to examine communications, the balance sheet, data sources, productivity and jobs, and the inflation framework.

Against that backdrop, the automotive market delivered in June. New-vehicle sales had a strong month even as automakers kept incentives in check. Industry average transaction price (ATP) growth was modest, as individual model prices ran about 2% above last year, but the buyer mix shifted toward lower-priced segments.

On the plus side, auto credit availability reached its highest level since December 2015, giving dealers an important tool heading into the second half and signaling a “risk-on” appetite for lenders. However, caution is warranted: Total consumer credit was essentially flat in May — the first net decline since June of last year — and revolving credit contracted. Rising rates and renewed energy price pressure may further test to see if the ever-resilient consumer can hold up as summer progresses.

New-Vehicle Sales and Pricing

New-vehicle sales showed strong hybrid volume in June, as the sales pace hit 16.5 million for the month. Incentive spending remained in check and has been relatively flat ever since February, a sign of discipline from automakers that continue to focus on profitability.

  • ATPs in June rose to $49,758, a 0.4% gain over May’s upwardly revised $49,451.
  • June marks the sixth straight month with ATP under $50,000, a line last crossed in December 2025.
  • ATPs in June were higher by 0.6% year over year. Key point: Like-for-like model prices continue to run higher by close to 2%, but buyers are rotating into lower-priced segments, holding the industry ATP relatively flat.
  • Incentive spending eased to $3,463 per unit, off 1.2% from May but still 1.6% higher than a year ago. As a share of ATP, incentives dipped to 7%, below the 7.1% level seen in May, yet above last June’s 6.9%.
  • Read the Kelley Blue Book ATP report on Tuesday on Cox Automotive Insights.

Credit Availability

Auto credit access rose again in June, with the Dealertrack Credit Availability Index climbing to its highest level since December 2015.

  • Among channels, most segments improved month over month, led by Independent Used and All Used, while Non-Captive New was the only channel to decline. Among lender types, all four improved, led by Captives and Finance Companies.
  • Approval rates rose 170 bps to 73.8%, accounting for most of June’s index gain, with a new all-time high for longer term loan share adding further support as the second largest contributor.
  • A modest widening in yield spread served as the primary drag, with a continued decline in subprime share also pulling against the advance for a third consecutive month.
  • Risk indicators remained elevated: Loan terms continued to grow, with a record 31.1% for loans exceeding 72 months. Negative equity eased modestly from May but remained up 220 bps year over year. Down payments continue to run about 50 bps below year-ago levels.

Consumer Credit

Consumer credit came in essentially flat in May, reversing sharply from April’s strong gain and signaling that spending headwinds may be building.

  • Total consumer credit fell $200 million in May on a seasonally adjusted basis, a deceleration from the upwardly revised $20.8 billion increase in April. The series is volatile month to month, but the May reading was the first net decline since June of last year.
  • Revolving credit contracted at an annualized rate of 4.7%, reversing from 10.9% growth in April.
  • Nonrevolving credit grew at an annualized rate of 1.6%, down from 3% in April. The gain was driven by auto loans, while outstanding student loans declined.
  • Looking ahead, nonrevolving credit faces continued headwinds from tariff passthrough. Recent changes to federal student loan policy add additional downward pressure on that segment.
Federal Open Market Committee Meeting Minutes

The June FOMC minutes revealed a committee that has moved away from an easing bias and unified around a hawkish hold at this time. The 12–0 vote to maintain the target range for rates marked a sharp contrast to April’s four dissents, but the committee implicitly showed their focus on taming inflation with the statement’s new closing line: “The Committee will deliver price stability.”   

  • The FOMC’s minutes showed a committee split on the path of interest rates moving forward. Many participants see rates at or slightly below the current range by year-end, while others see them needing to move higher.
  • A few committee members noted a case for hiking at the June meeting but supported holding. Several said they do not view the current stance as restrictive.
  • The economy continues to expand at a solid pace, with real GDP growth expected to hold through the back half of the year.
  • The labor market is stable, and many policymakers noted that the labor market is not currently a source of inflationary pressure.
  • Credit conditions remain somewhat tight for small businesses, and lower-income consumers are increasingly leaning on credit as gas and grocery prices stay elevated.