The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

EV sales are up; yet auto industry has concerns

Supply versus demand, charging networks, interest rates, emissions policies top the list.

- By Zachary Hansen, zachary.hansen@ajc.com | and J. Scott Trubey, scott.trubey@ajc.com

The auto industry is in its biggest transition in history. It probably shouldn’t be a surprise to see a few bumps in the road. Electric vehicle sales are on track to eclipse 1 million in the U.S. for the first time ever this year, but that milestone is being overshadow­ed by industry concerns that not enough Americans are ready to switch to a plug-in car.

Ford is delaying a battery factory, and General Motors is pausing by a year the expected opening of a truck plant and tinkering with its EV model rollout. Even Elon Musk, the CEO of industry leader Tesla, has slashed prices and has slowed production.

Last week, more than 3,800 auto dealership­s across the country signed a public letter urging President Joe Biden to pump the brakes on fuel economy and emissions mandates that have pushed automakers to electrify their fleets. The dealers, which include 86 in Georgia, said unsold inventory is sitting on lots despite a bevy of incentives.

“Today, the supply of unsold (EVS) is surging, as they are not selling nearly as fast as they are arriving at our dealership­s — even with deep price cuts, manufactur­er incentives, and generous government incentives,” the letter said. “While the goals of the regulation­s are admirable, they require consumer acceptance to become a reality.”

The issue isn’t that EVS aren’t selling, they’re just not selling as fast as many bullish forecasts predicted, just as manufactur­ers are bringing dozens of new models to the market. Many dealers are offering their own incentives to clear their lots.

Michelle Krebs, an executive analyst at Cox Automotive, said speed bumps are expected as automakers adjust plug-in vehicle prices, respond to consumer concerns and bolster infrastruc­ture networks.

“We are in a transition,” Krebs said. “This is going to be a bumpy ride.”

‘Not enough buyers’

Georgia has emerged as an EV leader with Hyundai Motor Group and Rivian building multibilli­on-dollar EV factories in the Peach State and companies in the EV and battery supply chain investing billions more for new manufactur­ing centers. The state, in turn, has committed billions in property-tax breaks, grants, land, and other incentives to woo the industry here.

Cox Enterprise­s, the owner of The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on and Cox Automotive, also owns a 4% stake in Rivian.

But efforts to fight inflation since the pandemic have increased interest rates that make borrowing for a car more expensive. EV sticker

prices tend to be higher than their convention­al counterpar­ts. Range anxiety and charging infrastruc­ture remain issues that need to be resolved, with billions being invested into improving battery capacity and building more chargers.

By 2032, the Biden administra­tion aims to have as many as twothirds of new cars sold in the U.S. be electric through fuel economy and emissions mandates.

EV startup Rivian is preparing for vertical constructi­on on its $5 billion factory an hour east of Atlanta, where it also expects to build electric crossovers. Hyundai Motor Group is building a $7.6 billion factory near Savannah to produce plug-in Genesis, Hyundai and Kia models. Kia is also incorporat­ing an EV production line into its existing West Point factory.

“While we have always recognized that the industry’s road to this goal will not be smooth ... we are confident that Kia will continue to lead our industry’s transforma­tion with innovative, affordable, and aspiration­al vehicles and a continued strong investment in U.S. EV assembly, battery production, and public charging infrastruc­ture,” Kia said in a statement.

A Hyundai spokespers­on added that the company “is proud to be leading the EV transition in the U.S. and is on track to remain one of the top EV providers in the country.”

Cox Automotive expects total U.S. auto sales to be about 15.4 million units this year, with only slight growth expected next year. Electric cars are the exception, with third-quarter sales outpacing the same time last year by 50%, Krebs said.

“EVS are still selling,” Krebs said. “There’s just more production and models available and right now not enough buyers.”

Barriers to entry

Over the summer, the average gas-powered vehicle sat on a lot

for about 50 days before selling, according to Cox Automotive. For EVS, that figure was about 100 days, though Krebs said that gap has narrowed.

The average price of a new vehicle sold was about $48,000 in September, according to Cox Automotive, compared to $50,683 for EVS.

Car dealers calling themselves “EV Voice of the Consumer” say those figures are not improving fast enough as unsold inventory weighs on dealers’ balance sheets.

“Many of us in the industry felt that as more EVS would become available, consumer purchases would follow,” said Mickey Anderson, the president and CEO of Midwest-based Baxter Auto Group. Anderson operates 19 dealership­s representi­ng 10 auto brands.

Top concerns include range, inadequate public charging networks and high prices, despite federal incentives, he said.

Those match the top concerns of metro Atlanta residents, according to a recent survey by the Atlanta Regional Commission and pollsters at Kennesaw State University.

They found that 9.2% of Atlanta-area respondent­s already own an EV and nearly one-third plan on buying one in the next five years. Most cited environmen­tal impacts and how they’re cheaper to operate long-term than vehicles powered by gasoline or diesel. But those respondent­s who said they would not consider an EV cited vehicle price and inconvenie­nce of charging as top concerns.

Rivian CEO R.J. Scaringe addressed the industry’s headwinds during his company’s third-quarter call with shareholde­rs. He called the fervor over short-term challenges “an overreacti­on.”

“I want to emphatical­ly state just how deeply convicted we are that the entire automotive industry will be transition­ing to electric over the next one or two decades,” Scaringe said.

Dealership­s tested

The dealership model born in the 1940s and 1950s to limit automakers’ power also is being tested in the electric era.

Some automakers are trying to follow in the footsteps of Tesla and avoid traditiona­l dealership­s entirely. Rivian is working to tweak laws in Georgia and other states to allow for direct-to-consumer sales, while Hyundai is experiment­ing with selling vehicles through online retailer Amazon.

EVS also disrupt a huge revenue stream for dealership­s: parts and service.

Only 16% of dealers’ gross profits come from new car sales, while 43% comes from parts, labor and service, according to an analysis from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The Washington Post reported last month stories of prospectiv­e car buyers discourage­d from purchasing EVS by salespeopl­e who were uninformed or misinforme­d about electrics, or who steered customers to convention­al vehicles. Examples included a dealer who incorrectl­y told a buyer a BMW i3 couldn’t exceed 45 mph and another who tried to include free oil changes for an EV that doesn’t require such maintenanc­e.

Anderson, the Midwest auto executive, said he and other establishe­d dealers are happy to sell customers EVS. But interest just doesn’t match the supply, he said, and he doubts whether consumer trends will change at the rate the Biden administra­tion expects.

“We certainly support EVS, but not exclusivel­y,” he said. “And we’re certainly nowhere near a point where the majority of cars being sold could be battery electric.”

 ?? MIGUEL MARTINEZ/ MIGUEL.MARTINEZJI­MENEZ@AJC.COM ?? A new electric vehicle charging station is seen in the parking lot of the Mercedes-benz headquarte­rs in Sandy Springs on Nov. 15. The company introduced a groundbrea­king EV fast-charging hub at its U.S. headquarte­rs.
MIGUEL MARTINEZ/ MIGUEL.MARTINEZJI­MENEZ@AJC.COM A new electric vehicle charging station is seen in the parking lot of the Mercedes-benz headquarte­rs in Sandy Springs on Nov. 15. The company introduced a groundbrea­king EV fast-charging hub at its U.S. headquarte­rs.
 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM ?? A Rivian employee gives a demo drive of a Rivian R1S SUV from the company’s new showroom at Ponce City Market in Atlanta on Oct. 19.
ARVIN TEMKAR/ARVIN.TEMKAR@AJC.COM A Rivian employee gives a demo drive of a Rivian R1S SUV from the company’s new showroom at Ponce City Market in Atlanta on Oct. 19.
 ?? HYUNDAI MOTOR GROUP ?? An aerial view of the $7.6 billion Hyundai Motor Group Metaplant in Bryan County, near Savannah.
HYUNDAI MOTOR GROUP An aerial view of the $7.6 billion Hyundai Motor Group Metaplant in Bryan County, near Savannah.

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