Toronto Star

Have auto sales run out of gas?

- David Olive

Recent exuberant reports that Canadian auto sales hit an all-time high in 2017 are not quite the sign of healthy economic growth that this leading indicator at first suggests.

After achieving a fifth consecutiv­e record last year, sales should be expected to decline at least modestly in 2018.

We can see that from the November and December figures, which each show declines in total sales.

And for Ontario’s all-important autoassemb­ly and auto-parts sectors, the fact that light trucks accounted for a whopping 68.6 per cent of total 2017 sales is not encouragin­g.

Continued strong sales in light trucks — that is, SUVs, crossovers, pickup trucks and vans — are more tied to vola- tile gas prices than passenger vehicles are.

The light-truck strength (sales were up 8.7 per cent) does signal robust consumer spending, but what it most powerfully tells us is that business investment is growing, since pickups and vans, in particular, often are fleet purchases by businesses.

Against that positive, though, the 3.4 per cent drop in 2017 passenger car sales is a worrisome sign, not least because this is where all-electric vehicles (EVs) and hybrids are concentrat­ed.

This same phenomenon is playing out in the huge U.S. market, where lighttruck sales are also far outpacing passenger vehicles.

A bright note is that EVs accounted for 2.1 per cent of GM Canada’s sales last year, making GM the leader in the vehicles that will dominate motoring in the future.

Given that EVs account for just 1 per cent of global vehicle sales, GM Canada is making significan­t progress, on the strength of its commitment to its strong-selling Chevy Bolt. Keeping tech successes closer to home The tech-related startups that are booming in Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver and Waterloo are part of a virtuous circle in which the innovative solutions of Canadian researcher­s are commercial­ized and scaled up by entreprene­urial startups.

But it’s a hard fact of business life that moving from start-up to scaleup is a leap that newish enterprise­s usually lack the capital and managerial expertise to make. And so, they sell out, most often to a deep-pocketed offshore buyer.

Indeed, a troubling byproduct of the intimate relationsh­ip between Canadian start-up incubators and offshore venture-capital firms is that VCs encourage start-up founders to have an “exit strategy” for selling out from Day One.

“How are we to build a culture of innovation if our entreprene­urs are focused on exiting rather than scaling?” asks Carl Rodrigues, CEO of Mississaug­a software firm SOTI Inc., in a recent newspaper op-ed.

Noting the paucity of Canadian tech brands on the world stage, Rodrigues says: “To have an innovation economy, we need to encourage our entreprene­urs to scale up, not to sell out. To grow and not to exit.”

That has been the strategy by which Magna Internatio­nal Inc., CGI Group Inc. and Open Text Corp. have remained homegrown global success stories.

Ottawa does its part in backstoppi­ng startups with its $100-million Innovation Solutions Canada program. We should expect more talk this year on a role for Canada’s enormous pensions funds in financing the next stage of growth, from start-up to scale up.

Canada’s four largest public pension funds alone command more than $700 billion in assets. They need to think about becoming second-stage incubators that finance a start-up’s evolution to world-class player, without its ownership slipping out of Canadian hands. America’s double-standard on foreign direct investment The Trump administra­tion has just torpedoed another proposed Chinese takeover of a U.S.-based company, Ant Financial Services Co. Ltd.’s $1.2-billion (U.S.) deal to buy digital payments firm MoneyGram Internatio­nal Inc. of Dallas.

The acquisitio­n was ostensibly blocked for national security reasons, but financial services are seldom associated with national security in rejecting takeovers.

Ant Financial is owned by Jack Ma and fellow executives at Ma’s Chinese internet conglomera­te, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. Facing tough competitio­n from Chinese rival Tencent Holdings Ltd.’s WeChat payment operation, Ma sought MoneyGram and its approximat­ely 350,000 remittance outlets in more than 200 countries less as a means of cracking the U.S. market than countering WeChat in fast-growing markets including China, India, the Philippine­s and other Asian markets.

At least three other proposed Chinese acquisitio­ns of U.S. financial firms have either been blocked or have seen the federal approval process stalled.

You might think that China, the world’s biggest creditor nation, might be encouraged to recycle some of its funds back into the U.S., where they were earned from WalMart shoppers, just as Japanese and petrodolla­r investment­s were welcomed in the U.S. in the 1980s and 1990s.

As to privacy concerns, Russia influenced the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al contest, and is expected to meddle in this year’s U.S. mid-term elections, without benefit of owning U.S. firms.

Then there’s the hypocrisy: Watch for CEOs of Fortune 500 companies, from Google Inc. to General Electric Co., to make their case in Washington that their own considerab­le investment­s in China are jeopardize­d by Beijing’s regard for every rejected takeover of a U.S. firm as an act of hostility that will be met with retaliatio­n. dolive@thestar.ca

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 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Though Canadian auto sales hit an all-time high in 2017, there are worrisome signs behind the headlines.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Though Canadian auto sales hit an all-time high in 2017, there are worrisome signs behind the headlines.

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