Windsor Star

Auto suppliers buoyed by industry ramping up remain in ‘cautious camp’

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DETROIT Auto parts suppliers across North America said they are encouraged as major automakers accelerate production after coronaviru­s pandemic shutdowns, but are holding back on hiring and investment because of longer-term uncertaint­y.

U.S. automakers reopened most assembly plants in late May after states began loosening restrictio­ns, and stronger-than-expected retail auto sales in May have automakers ramping up production of the highly profitable trucks and SUVS consumers are buying.

However, several auto suppliers interviewe­d by Reuters worry about demand heading into 2021. U.S. and global auto sales are not expected to recover to PRECOVID-19 crisis levels until 2022 or 2023, Bank of America analyst John Murphy said during a presentati­on on Thursday.

Andreas Weller, CEO of aluminum parts maker Aludyne, sees very strong orders for July, but he laid off more than 10 per cent of his workers because the days of Americans buying 17 million new vehicles a year will not return soon.

“What’s the market going to look like for the rest of the year, going into next year? That’s a bigger unknown,” he said.

Magna Internatio­nal Inc. CEO Don Walker said orders from automakers were good and the “big unknown” was how consumers respond.

“I’ll be surprised if anybody moves to shut part of the auto industry production down again,” he said at a Deutsche Bank conference on Thursday.

HIRING FREEZES

Other concerns include the potential for smaller parts makers to fail and bring production to a halt, and the possibilit­y of another COVID-19 outbreak in the fall.

“We don’t know what the world is going to be,” said Joe Perkins, chief executive of engineerin­g and machining firm Busche Performanc­e Group, which counts GM and Ford among its customers. “I’m very hesitant to predict where the market goes through the balance of 2020 and 2021.”

Most of the 11 supplier executives contacted by Reuters said they are closely watching spending, in some cases laying off or slowly recalling furloughed workers, implementi­ng hiring freezes and delaying capital spending.

In the short term, suppliers said they welcome the accelerati­ng pace of production as automakers try to restock depleted showrooms. Ford said on Wednesday it expected its U.S. assembly plants to regain PRE-COVID -19 operating levels by early July.

“They’re basically ramping up to full production ... quicker than we thought,” said John Dunn, Americas CEO for Clean Energy Systems, a Plastic Omnium unit that makes fuel and emissions-reduction systems.

The happiest suppliers are those building pickup trucks and SUVS as demand continues to shift from sedans, said Pierre Labat, vice-president of global auto for aluminum provider Novelis Inc., which is owned by India’s Hindalco Industries Ltd.

Some product developmen­t plans have been delayed by the outbreak, or cancelled in some cases like the electric vehicle Ford’s Lincoln brand was going to build with Rivian. Bob Roth, co-owner of Roman Manufactur­ing, which

We don’t know what the world is going to be. I’m very hesitant to predict where the market goes through the balance of 2020 and 2021.

builds tooling and equipment, lost that job.

“I would be hard-pressed to place my bet at the moment, which puts me in the cautious camp,” Roth said. “We’ve just got to get through the next six to 18 months.”

The pressure on automakers to reduce CO2 emissions through electrific­ation is a bright spot for some suppliers.

“Automakers realize this isn’t a game of poker,” said Andrew Storm, CEO of Eckhart Inc, which builds robots and automated tools for GM, Tesla Inc and others. “Either they commit the capital or the disruptive forces of innovation obliterate their long-term existence into the bin of history.”

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