Hartford Courant

Chip shortage

GM, Ford to temporaril­y close auto plants despite strong demand for vehicles

- By Tom Krisher

General Motors, Ford forced to temporaril­y close some factories.

DETROIT — The global shortage of computer chips is getting worse, forcing automakers to temporaril­y close factories including those that build popular pickups.

General Motors announced Thursday that it would pause production at eight North American plants during the next two weeks, including two that make the company’s top-selling Chevrolet Silverado pickup.

Ford will stop making pickups at its Kansas City Assembly Plant for the next two weeks. Shifts will be cut at two more truck plants in Dearborn, Michigan, and Louisville, Kentucky.

The cuts will compound an already short supply of cars, trucks and SUVS on dealer lots nationwide that have pushed prices to record levels. Automakers reported that U.S. dealers had just under 1 million new vehicles on their lots in August, 72% lower than the 3.58 million in August 2019.

“It now appears to be accelerati­ng in the wrong direction,” said Jeff Schuster, president of global vehicle forecastin­g for LMC Automotive, a consulting firm.

Industry analysts say the delta variant of the coronaviru­s has hit workers at chip factories in southeast Asia hard, forcing some plants to close. That’s worsened a chip shortage that was starting to improve.

“Now the prospects for new sales for the rest of the year continue to dim with the reality that tight inventory will last well into 2022,” said Kevin Roberts, director of industry insights for Cargurus.com.

Demand for trucks, SUVS and other autos is strong, but buyers are growing frustrated due to lack of inventory and high prices. U.S. light vehicle sales fell nearly 18% in August compared with a year ago, while the average vehicle sale price hit over $41,000, a record, according to J.D. Power.

The August sales dip and inventory shortages prompted Schuster to cut his U.S. sales forecast for the year to 15.7 million. Until the pandemic hit, sales had been running around 17 million per year.

GM is shutting down pickup truck plants in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and Silao, Mexico, for a week starting Monday. A plant in Wentzville, Missouri, that builds midsize pickups and big vans will close for two weeks. Other plants that make small and midsize SUVS will be idled for two weeks or longer.

The GM and Ford cuts come on top of temporary plant closures announced previously by Toyota, Nissan and Stellantis, formerly Fiat Chrysler.

Stellantis shut down its Ram truck assembly plant in Sterling Heights, Michigan this week due to the chip shortage. The company’s Belvidere, Illinois, smallsuv plant and a minivan plant in Windsor, Ontario are down for two weeks.

Toyota said it would slash production by at least 40% in Japan and North America for the next two months, cutting production by 360,000 vehicles worldwide in September alone.

Nissan, which announced in mid-august that chip shortages would force it to close its huge factory in Smyrna, Tennessee, for two weeks until Aug. 30, now says the closure will last four weeks, until Sept. 13.

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