USA TODAY International Edition

Chip shortage still stalls automakers

Shortfall has ripple effect across the auto industry

- Jamie L. LaReau

They are little bigger than a quarter, but tiny semiconduc­tor chips are bringing production of vehicles across the nation to a halt.

Car dealers have barren parking lots, consumers face limited options on newvehicle purchases and buyers must wait, and wait, for their new ride to be built. Tens of thousands of new vehicles sit in parking lots awaiting semiconduc­tor chips before they can be shipped to dealers.

Here’s what you need to know about semiconduc­tor chips:

So what are these chips?

The chips are tiny transistor­s made from silicon, which is found in most of the minerals on the Earth’s surface. They allow computers, smartphone­s, appliances and other electrical devices to function. Vehicles use chips, too.

Silicon feeds a $ 500 billion chip industry, according to a report by the BBC. The chips underpin a global tech economy worth an estimated $ 3 trillion, the report said. The raw materials for the semiconduc­tor business often come from Japan and Mexico, with the chips made in Taiwan, China and some in the U. S.

Why is there a chip shortage?

The chip shortage is a result of the COVID- 19 pandemic. For starters, the pandemic increased demand for the personal electronic­s such as cellphones and laptops that chips enable, to the point where production could not keep pace with demand.

What’s more, in March 2020, the global pandemic prompted automakers, suppliers and car dealership­s to close down. The economy went into a recession.

The automakers, which have experience­d previous recessions, quickly canceled orders for parts with computer chips, thinking auto sales would nosedive, said Michelle Krebs, executive analyst for Autotrader.

Sales of new cars did plummet initially, but quickly rebounded with pent- up demand and 0% financing offers. Also, dealers figured out how to sell vehicles online, offering home pickup and delivery.

So when the factories restarted, the stronger- than- expected demand for new vehicles outpaced production and has yet to catch up.

“Automakers and suppliers that use chips contacted their chipmakers and put back their orders,” Krebs said. “By then, chip capacity was consumed by other businesses – phones, computers, video games – as people worked and schooled at home.”

Global chip production is monopolize­d by a few global, Asia- Pacific suppliers, said Joe McCabe, CEO of AutoForeca­st Solutions LLC.

“Everyone’s lights went off at the same time,” McCabe said.

“This means that there was no ability to build inventory of products and solutions when businesses were able to turn their lights back on. This created a significant bottleneck in all manufactur­ing processes.”

The chip deficit was further complicate­d by a fire at plant owned by chipmaker Renesas Electronic­s in Japan.

The damage was extensive, and the plant is not yet up to full production, but officials are hoping it will reach full production in June, Krebs said.

Why is there so much competitio­n for chips?

In May, global consulting firm AlixPartne­rs in Southfield, Michigan, said the chip shortages could cost the global auto industry $ 110 billion for the year.

GM CEO Mary Barra has said the shortage could cost GM up to $ 2 billion in lost earnings this year. Barra said GM expected chip supplies to return to normal in the second half of the year.

The Alliance for Auto Innovation, the trade group that represents automakers, said the shortage could hurt auto production for another six months and result in 1.28 million fewer vehicles being made in the U. S. this year.

So it is critical for automakers to get as many chips as possible to keep assembly lines moving to mitigate losses.

It remains unclear whether automakers might be able to make up that production and any revenue losses over time, Krebs said.

“The losses are being offset by higher vehicle prices and less expense,” Krebs said. “Almost every automaker in every region has been forced to make production cuts. As a result, inventorie­s are extremely low while consumer demand is extremely high. That means vehicle prices are high.”

In the first week of June, the average listing price of a new vehicle was $ 40,566, up nearly $ 200 from the prior week. The average listing price was 5.5% above last year, and 10.3% above the same week in 2019, Krebs said.

Used- car prices also are high because with new cars not moving, trade- ins aren’t happening, creating a shortage ofused cars. too. The average listing price for a used vehicle was $ 23,786, up nearly $ 340 from the prior week, Krebs said. Prices are running 22% above 2020 and 2019 levels, she said.

Why is my vehicle delayed because of chips?

Many automakers have idled factories and stopped making some vehicles altogether so as to ship whatever chips they can get to more in- demand highly profitable vehicles such as pickups and SUVs. Also, GM and Ford Motor Co. are building the vehicles without the chips, then parking them to await the part. Once the chips arrive, those vehicles are put through final assembly and shipped to dealers. But the delay can be weeks.

In the meantime, supply of new vehicles is at an all- time low, Krebs said. Used supply is slowly rising due to a slowing sales pace. These trends likely will continue over the coming weeks since there is little that could change the current situation, Krebs said.

What sorts of things are chips used for in vehicles?

Cars use the chips in a variety of electronic­s systems. One car part could use 500 to 1,500 chips depending on the complexity of the part.

How long will the chip shortage last?

Cisco CEO Chuck Robbins told the BBC in late April: “We think we’ve got another six months to get through the short term. The providers are building out more capacity. And that’ll get better and better over the next 12 to 18 months.”

How are the automakers adjusting, or not adjusting?

In the short term, automakers have been cutting the production of vehicles like cars that are not as much in demand and not as profitable as pickups and SUVs, so as to redirect chips from cars into the money- making vehicles.

They also are building vehicles and parking them until chips become available.

Or they are building vehicles without some features – Tesla has taken out the passenger side lumbar support; GM took out fuel- saving features such as automatic start- stop and the fuel management module.

Long term, automakers are examining their supply chains. The just- intime- inventory system that they took from Toyota may be revamped some with critical parts like chips, Krebs said.

The chipmakers are trying to boost production and are looking at building more capacity, including in the U. S.

The Biden administra­tion has also assigned a task force to study the chips’ supply chain. The U. S. Senate has voted 68- 32 in favor of legislatio­n intended to battle back against overseas competitio­n, especially a growing threat from China, including investing more than $ 50 billion into the making of semiconduc­tors.

Looking forward, automakers, suppliers and government officials are looking at EVs and where batteries and other parts come from as they push for North American production.

“The chip shortage demonstrat­ed our exposure to a limited domestic production capacity to the point where it has turned into an issue of national security,” McCabe said. “Each major global market is now getting full support from their government­s for a combinatio­n of domestic and redundant supply streams. Expect to see many new, smaller chip producers, scale up to help mitigate the issue in the future – with government money supporting the efforts.”

McCabe said carmakers are likely to become more vertically integrated in chip production, taking direct responsibi­lity for multi- year, high- volume contracts to make sure there are no future capacity constraint­s. Volkswagen has already indicated this direction.

As most carmakers move toward electric vehicles, the need for high volume, and more complex chips, will help shape the global chip manufactur­ing landscape, McCabe said.

 ?? ERIC SEALS AND MANDI WRIGHT/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? New Ford F- 150 pickup trucks sit on a lot of the Department of Public Works rail yard off I- 96 near Evergreen in Detroit in April. The trucks are waiting for semiconduc­tors, the company said. Trucks will get quality checks done before being shipping to dealers.
ERIC SEALS AND MANDI WRIGHT/ USA TODAY NETWORK New Ford F- 150 pickup trucks sit on a lot of the Department of Public Works rail yard off I- 96 near Evergreen in Detroit in April. The trucks are waiting for semiconduc­tors, the company said. Trucks will get quality checks done before being shipping to dealers.

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