The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Automakers dodged parts shortage, but virus is posing a new threat

- By tom krisher

DETROIT » When the coronaviru­s cut off the flow of parts from China in early January, most global automakers were ready: Anticipati­ng such a crisis, they had prepared to tap other suppliers and to conserve parts that they had stored.

Now, they face fast-moving new threats that seem beyond their control: Falling sales and sickened factory workers as the COVID-19 disease spreads through the United States and Europe.

The result is that the auto industry, which helped lead the U.S. economy out of the financial meltdown more than a decade ago, could be forced to reduce spending, slow or shutter factories and draw upon cash stockpiles to weather a pandemic that is likely to tilt the world into a recession.

With many countries essentiall­y locked down, profession­al sports leagues canceling games and dizzying falls in the stock markets, analysts say fear is setting in. That portends diminished consumer confidence and likely lower auto sales.

“People aren’t rushing out and saying, ‘Now is a good time to buy a car,’ “said Brian Collie, global leader for automotive with Boston Consulting Group. “They’re saying, ‘Let’s wait. On hold.’ ”

Earlier this month, the consulting firm LMC Automotive lopped nearly 4 million vehicles off its forecast for 2020 global sales — a 4.4% decline to 86.4 million. For the U.S., the forecast dropped 3% to 16.5 million.

Others see a gloomier outlook. Adam Jonas, a veteran analyst at Morgan Stanley, expects about a 9% decline in the United States. In an investor note, Jones warned that sales for the year could go as low as 14.5 million, “driven by the potential demand shock that could stem from coronaviru­s fears.” Last year’s sales were above 17 million.

Jeff Schuster, a senior vice president at LMC, noted that his firm’s forecast was made early in the month and that conditions have worsened since then. It’s likely, Schuster said, that LMC’s forecast could be downgraded in the United States and globally.

Garrett Nelson, senior equity analyst with CFRA, said auto sales in China are a good harbinger of what would happen as the virus spreads further in the U.S. and other countries. Sales in China fell 44% during the first two months of the year, including an 82% plunge in February, with much of the country on lockdown.

In the Seattle area, which is suffering through the worst COVID-19 outbreak in the nation, sales at Bowen Scarff Ford Lincoln have sunk to nearly nothing in the past week. But there are extenuatin­g circumstan­ces at the dealership in Kent, Washington: King County, which includes Kent, bought an 84-room EconoLodge hotel next door to the dealership to house people quarantine­d because of the virus.

As word has spread, business at the dealership has dried up, said

Kari Weston, general sales manager. Customers have told the dealer that they won’t look over any of the 400 vehicles on the lot for fear that infected people might be leaving the hotel and wandering into nearby businesses.

“We’ve had three customers so far that said they won’t come down here,” Weston said. “We have employees now that are saying they won’t come in if the people aren’t going to be contained.”

Sales, she said, were pretty decent during the first week of March despite the outbreak. Then word got out about the hotel and traffic tanked.

“We are getting a few customers, but very few,” she said.

Keeping factories open may also be a problem. Carmakers PSA and Fiat Chrysler are closing factories in Europe until March 27 due to COVID-19. PSA noted serious cases near its factories and said it has experience­d parts supply disruption­s and “the sudden decline in the automobile markets.”

Ford closed a plant in Valencia, Spain, for a week after three workers came down with the virus in a single day. Fiat Chrysler said last week that a transmissi­on factory worker in Kokomo, Indiana, tested positive for the virus. His work area was scrubbed, and workers who had had contact with him were told to stay home.

The plant, like other U.S. auto factories, kept producing. The United Auto Workers union and the three Detroit automakers set up a task force to protect workers.

Automakers had stocked up on parts in the fourth quarter ahead of a U.S.-China trade deal and before the Chinese New Year holiday in January, said Kristin Dziczek, a vice president at the Center for Automotive Research, an industry think tank in Michigan. It’s not clear yet whether that stockpile will help delay production halts or mitigate them until factories restart once the virus eventually ebbs, she said.

 ?? NG HAN GUAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Attendees take a close look at cars from BYD at the Auto Shanghai show in Shanghai last year. China’s auto sales plunged 81.7% in February, 2020, from a year ago after Beijing shut down much of the economy to fight a virus outbreak, adding to problems for an industry that already was struggling with shrinking demand.
NG HAN GUAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Attendees take a close look at cars from BYD at the Auto Shanghai show in Shanghai last year. China’s auto sales plunged 81.7% in February, 2020, from a year ago after Beijing shut down much of the economy to fight a virus outbreak, adding to problems for an industry that already was struggling with shrinking demand.

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