Volvo begins XC40 exports to South Africa

Volvo Car Corp., tapping China as a key export hub, launched shipments of the XC40 compact crossovers to South Africa. 

The vehicles, loaded on an ocean liner in Shanghai on Sunday, are scheduled to dock at South Africa’s Durpan port in mid-June, Volvo’s China sales company said. 

The XC40 also will be exported to other countries, including those in the Americas, Oceania and Asia, the company added.

It is the fourth vehicle Volvo has shipped to other markets from plants in China, following the S60 and S90 sedans and the XC60 crossover. 

In China, Volvo builds the S60 and XC60 in the southwest city of Chengdu. The S90 is manufactured in Daqing. 

The XC40 is built at Geely Automobile Holdings’ factory in the east city of Luqiao. Volvo and Geely are both owned by private Chinese company Zhejiang Geely Holding Group. 

China is Volvo’s largest market globally. The Swedish brand’s local deliveries, dampened by the…

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Thousands of Jump bikes scrapped, report says

Thousands of Jump bikes scrapped, report says

Tens of thousands of electric Jump bikes appear to be getting kicked to the curb, just weeks after a scooter company shake-up.

In a report Friday, the Bike Share Museum — a digital archive of bike models that have been retired by micromobility companies — shared images of hundreds of discarded red Jump bikes in Seattle.

The news came two weeks after scooter company Lime announced that it had secured a $170 million investment round, led by ride-hailing giant Uber. As part of the deal, Lime will acquire Uber's Jump bike-rental business. Uber acquired Jump in 2018, but the venture struggled to be profitable.

The Bike Share Museum has since updated its post, saying that at least 20,000 Jump bikes were being scrapped. An employee at one North Carolina recycling facility reports receiving several trailers full of the bikes, and some accounts say electronic and battery components were removed from the…

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Sales dip in first 20 days of May

New-vehicle demand softened in the first 20 days of May after a modest rebound in April, underscoring the halting recovery the industry faces as consumers hunker down following the COVID-19 outbreak, even with widespread discounts and promotions.

Sales across the industry dipped 2.5 percent to some 971,000 in the first several weeks of the month, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

By contrast, new-vehicle production surged 17 percent to nearly 1.14 million during the period, the trade group said.

With plants idled and showrooms shuttered during the coronavirus outbreak, which broke out in China in late January, new-vehicle deliveries across the country plunged 42 percent to approach 3.7 million in the first quarter. 

The outbreak was largely brought under control in mid-March, and industry sales rose 4.4 percent to 2.07 million in April, ending 21 straight months of contraction. 

In the first four mon…

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Acura’s next-gen TLX carries big expectations

LOS ANGELES — Acura's second-generation TLX has big shoes to fill.

Honda Motor Co.'s luxury brand is discontinuing the bigger RLX, elevating the midsize TLX to flagship sedan status. Acura is banking on the redesigned model to add cred that a strategic shift to performance is taking hold — even as Americans abandon the traditional sedan in all stripes.

The Japanese automaker detailed the features of the re-engineered TLX in a 15-minute video on Thursday that served as a global reveal. The latest sedan was scheduled to appear at the New York auto show in April before the event was canceled because of the coronavirus outbreak.

The 2021 TLX is longer, wider, lower and has a more expansive hood to give it the classic proportions of a sports sedan. It echoes the well-received 2019 Type S Concept that was a thinly veiled precursor to the production sedan. Acura's Type S performance variant is also being revived on the latest TLX after …

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Automakers’ catch-up plan? Skip summer breaks

American Honda, BMW and Mercedes-Benz are canceling their traditional summer factory downtime at U.S. and Canadian plants in order to boost vehicle inventory as sales improve thanks to easing stay-at-home guidelines.

The automakers are eager to replenish inventory after their factories were idled for several weeks in accordance with government coronavirus rules.

Detroit 3 automakers have until next week to notify the UAW of planned changes in their own production calendar. Full-size pickups, in particular, have seen falling inventories as sales have remained surprisingly brisk during the lockdown.

Honda lost seven weeks of production from March 23 to May 11 as factories across North America shut down to reduce coronavirus transmission. Now it is adding production days on June 27, 29 and 30 that had previously been designated as days off for plant workers, the company said in an email to Automotive News.

"With the auto market improving as stay-at-h…

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GPB accused of violating Mass. securities law

GPB Capital Holdings, an alternative asset management firm and majority owner of Prime Automotive Group, has been accused of violating Massachusetts securities laws in its marketing materials to investors.

William Galvin, secretary of the commonwealth, filed an administrative complaint Wednesday against GPB following an investigation of more than a year and a half. The complaint accuses GPB of issuing marketing materials containing "material misstatements and omissions" to more than 180 Massachusetts investors.

Those investors, who contributed more than $14 million to five GPB investment funds, did so based on false information that they would be compensated from operational profits, Galvin's Securities Division said in the complaint.

Investors were promised a yearly 8 percent distribution paid on a monthly basis from operating profits, but eventually the firm could no longer meet those requirements and turned to investor contributions to meet its distri…

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N.Y. Honda store to pay $1.5 million for racial discrimination, deceptive practices

A New York Honda dealership agreed to pay $1.5 million to settle charges levied by the Federal Trade Commission that management discriminated against African-American and Hispanic car buyers, among other violations.

The FTC, in a complaint filed in U.S. District Court in New York on May 21, accused Bronx Honda and its general manager, Carlo Fittanto, of deceptive advertising, inflating vehicle prices with fraudulent expenses, charging above the minimum $75 state limit for documentation fees, and double-charging consumers taxes on vehicle purchases. With these and other practices, the FTC alleged the defendants violated the FTC Act, the Truth in Lending Act and the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, the agency said in a statement Wednesday.

Attempts to reach managers at the dealership for comment were unsuccessful on Wednesday.

One scam cited by the FTC in its initial complaint involved adding fees to certified pre-owned Honda vehicles.

Despite the fact…

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Five coronavirus mobility innovations attract Michigan grants

PlanetM, the State of Michigan's mobility initiative, said Tuesday it was awarding more than $280,000 in grants to five companies to tackle mobility difficulties in the state caused by the coronavirus crisis.

The companies will receive the grants in increments based on their ability to reach milestones preestablished with PlanetM.

GHSP, in Grand Haven, Mich., will receive $80,000 to develop its mobile UV-C treatment that harnesses UV-C light in various doses to disinfect the air and high-touch surfaces in shared vehicles after occupants exit.

Gatik, in Palo Alto, Calif., will receive $100,000 to provide contactless delivery via autonomous vehicles traveling assigned routes in Grand Rapids and Rochester, Mich.

Penske Vehicle Services, of Troy, Mich., a unit of Penske Corp., will get $28,000 to produce portable vinyl partitions separating front and back seat occupants, though not blocking them off completely.

RCO Engineering, in Roseville, Mi…

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GM accused of discrimination by 2 Mich. dealerships

DETROIT — The owners of two General Motors dealerships in Michigan are suing the automaker and GM Financial, alleging unfair termination of their floorplan agreements and racial discrimination.

The federal lawsuit says two GM executives accused one of the stores, Superior Buick-GMC in Dearborn, of breaching its franchise agreement by letting numerous customers receive discounts by falsely claiming to be related to a GM employee or retiree. The dealership, which has many Arab American customers, lost sales because GM imposed on its buyers an intimidating approval process for the family discounts, the suit says.

GM denied the dealers' claims and called the discrimination allegations "absolutely false."

"These particular dealers failed and refused to adhere to the terms of their agreements and violated requirements established to prevent abuse of a GM incentive program," a GM spokesman said in an email. "GM has an excellent record for diversity and inclusi…

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23 states sue Trump administration over fuel efficiency rollback

WASHINGTON -- A group of 23 U.S. states led by California, the District of Columbia and four major cities are filing suit Wednesday to challenge a Trump administration decision to weaken Obama administration fuel efficiency standards.

In March, the Trump administration issued final rules requiring 1.5 percent annual increases in efficiency through 2026 -- far weaker than the 5 percent increases in the discarded Obama-era rules -- but abandoned its August 2018 proposal to freeze requirements at 2020 levels through 2026.

Last week, a trade group representing General Motors, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, Toyota Motor Corp. and others sided with the Trump administration on its plan and opposed a legal challenge to further weaken the requirements. Other automakers including Ford Motor Co. are not backing the administration plan.

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said the revised requirements "will increase costs to consumers and allow the…

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Ford marked Trump visit with special face shield, leather bomber jackets

DETROIT — Ford Motor Co. last week asked President Donald Trump to comply with its rules by wearing a face mask and other protective equipment throughout his visit to a Michigan plant building ventilators.

He chose not to, aside from a brief behind-the-scenes tour, but the automaker was ready if he did.

In the days leading up to the presidential visit, Ford scrambled to prepare a one-off face shield specifically for Trump. A member of the automaker's D-Ford design team mocked up a number of special shield designs in his personal shop: one featuring a blue band with the presidential seal and "President of the United States" stamped in the middle, another with a simple red, white and blue background with the words "United States of America."

Ford ultimately chose another design: The words "Commander-in-Chief" over a navy blue background, flanked by two Ford Blue Oval logos and accented by red stripes and white stars. It was made with the same rubber door-s…

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Tesla’s price cuts signal demand is weaker than shares suggest, analysts say

Tesla Inc.’s overnight price cuts suggest the coronavirus is putting a bigger damper on demand than has been reflected in the electric-car maker’s share price, two analysts said.

The $5,000 reductions for the Model S and X and $2,000 cut for the Model 3 were an “acknowledgment that Tesla isn’t immune to material North American demand weakness,” Craig Irwin, an analyst at Roth Capital Partners, said in a report Wednesday.

“With the stock trading in the stratosphere,” Roth wrote, “the key question is, ‘Can Tesla continue to deliver an interesting growth rate in the U.S.?’”

Credit Suisse’s Dan Levy said the discounts change the narrative around the company’s volume this quarter. Prior to the price cuts, investors were concerned that demand would be limited by tight inventory. The company shut down production at its lone U.S. auto plant on March 23 and rushed to reopen the facility -- initially without local authorities’ permission -- in mid May.

Tesl…

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