A new report shows that only 7 percent of new-car buyers in the US completed their purchase online, despite a major push by automakers, Amazon, and others to move past the dealership.
Some Chinese auto brands are continuing to push excess inventories to dealers, the country's car dealers' association said, ...
Wakandans and Fantastic Four appear in new 'Avengers: Doomsday' trailer The US government seems to have a clear message for ...
Used-car buyers get a big win as GM extends CarBravo warranties to 12 months with no deductible and nationwide dealer support ...
As inventory normalizes, the balance of power between shoppers and retailers is shifting, with more room to negotiate and a ...
As prices remain high, more buyers are stretching payments across 72-month or even 84-month loans. While a longer loan lowers ...
Here's a list of discontinued cars that somehow appeared as new sales in 2025. Uncover the mystery of these automotive ...
China expects slower auto sales and export growth in 2026 as weak demand, inventory pressure, and trade uncertainty persist.
TheZebra reports new car prices are high due to tariffs, production issues, and rising material costs, with ownership ...
A new report from Becker & Poliakoff shows California is the "Coldest" real estate market in 2026. That same report marks ...
Rather than go toe-to-toe with giants like Amazon, Veeva Systems built cloud services to serve the demands of one industry: ...
Around 100 vehicles remain unsold four months after Tesla shipped approximately 300 Model Y sport utility vehicles to India.