Car sales plummet in April, setting stage for possible auto industry shakeup - Action News
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Car sales plummet in April, setting stage for possible auto industry shakeup

An automative consultant said while the industry has weathered a lot of economic turbulence over the last century, the coronavirus pandemic is something altogether different and has the potential to send shockwaves rippling through the sector.

Car sales fell nearly 75 per cent in April, after falling some 48 per cent in March

A woman wearing a surgical mask goes for a test drive shortly after being handed a set of keys at a car dealership in London, Ont. As of Monday, Ontario car dealers were allowed to reopen, but by appointment only. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

A Canadian auto industry analyst says two months of plummeting car sales caused by the coronavirus crisiscould set the stage for a major shakeup affecting everythingfrom car manufacturing to dealerships, even the development of electric and autonomous vehicles.

Dennis DesRosiers of DesRosiersAutomotive Consultants said that April sales of Canadian automobiles fell by nearly 75 per cent, the second straight month of double-digit declines afterMarch salesfell by 48 per cent as the epidemic took hold across Canada.

"Virtually 100 percent of showrooms across Canada were closed for all of April.The manufacturing shutdown in March pretty well happened globally. They're just not making vehicles," he said."It's really devastating.

DesRosiers said the auto industry has weathered economic storms before, such as the energy crisis ofthe 1970s, or the financial meltdown of 2008, but he said there wasa fundamental difference between those events and the coronavirus crisis.

Auto sector has been rocked before, but not like this

A survey of Canadian Automobile Dealers Association suggests 96 per cent of all dealerships in Canada have had to lay off staff because of the coronavirus crisis. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

"Consumers were still driving," he said. "If you're not driving, you're vehicle is just sitting there in the driveway and so you don't need to replace it."

"Until we start driving again, it's going to be very difficult to get people into showrooms."

Even if people wanted to go, however, those showrooms still aren't quite open.On Monday, car dealerships in Ontario were allowed to resume face-to-face sales for thefirst time in weeks, but with new physical distancing restrictions.

The province has decreed any sales or test drives must be by appointment-only and customers and staff must adhereto strict social distancing measures.

CBC News called and visited several car dealerships in the London, Ont. area this week to find out how businesses were operating under the new restrictions, but all of the dealerships either declined to comment or did not respond to the request, with some sales staffadmitting that they did not yet understand the new restrictions well enough to talk about them.

Among the dealerships visited or contacted by CBC News, very few sales staff seemed to be working and an April survey by the Canadian Auto Dealers Association seems to reflect that. The survey suggests 96per cent of car dealerships have been forced to lay off staff during the crisis, with 78 per cent of respondents saying they've had to lay off10 staff or more.

DesRosiers said he believes dealerships with fewer staff will likely be the new normal in a post-pandemic auto dealership.

"I think you're going to see everyone run a lot leaner. One of the things that I think a lot car dealers are discoveringis how well they can function with fewer people.You're going to see them take their people back slower than what a lot of people are hoping.

How COVID-19 could affect the future of the auto industry

Used car dealerships like this one in London, Ont. fared slightly better than new car dealerships in terms of sales in April, likely because used cars less expensive. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

DesRosiers said while car dealers will eventually rebound, other parts of the auto sector will be hit harder and may take a while to get back up, including the development of more affordable electric or autonomous vehicles, which depends on a public sector that's been financially stretched by the pandemic.

"What's the government to do? Support a small business with its deficits or support a wealthy guy buying an electric vehicle? I suspect you're going to see an awful lot of money vacate the electric vehicle industry.They were struggling to find the money for EV and autonomous technology before all this."

"There were a lot of analysts that thought we'd be at a 10 per cent EV market this decade, but I think that's unrealistic now."

The other place DesRosiers thinks the pandemic will hammer the auto industry is luxury car sales, which has seen high growth for the last decade, he said.

"One of the reasons that was doing so well is because we had a lot of what I like to call 'pretend' luxury buyers, people who aspire to have a luxury vehicle but can't afford one."

DesRosiers said sales of lower end luxury cars have been the fastest growing part of the industry for thelast decade. Sales were so good, manufacturers began making cheaper versions of prestigious brands to attract more buyers at the lowest end of the price range.

Because the coronavirus has upended so many lives through quarantines, layoffs and lockdowns, many of the people who want a prestigious brand may no longer be able to buy in a post-pandemic world.

"Well if you were a pretend luxury buyer, you're out of the market. You could barely afford it when times were good, when times are struggling like this, who knows how long it's going to take back?"