Ford set to announce $3.5 billion EV battery plant in Michigan, sources say

Ford Motor Co. on Monday plans to announce details of a massive electric vehicle battery plant it has decided to build in Marshall, Mich., two people with knowledge of the company's plans told Crain's Detroit Business, an affiliate of Automotive News.

The automaker is scheduled to hold a news event at Ford Ion Park in Romulus on Monday, according to an advisory Ford sent Friday.

The event will be centered on how Ford "is working to scale EVs quickly and, ultimately, make them more accessible to customers," Ford said.

The announcement will include details about the $3.5 billion factory and 2,500 new jobs in Marshall, the two officials told Crain's.

The state has offered $1 billion in incentives, including cash and site development funds, from Michigan's Strategic Outreach and Attraction Reserve Fund, one of the sources said. The account has around $200 million that is not spoken for. Lawmakers will be asked to add $800 million in a supplemental s…

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Tesla shareholder pursues board seat

Ross Gerber, a vocal Tesla Inc. shareholder, said he will pursue a board seat at the electric-vehicle maker, with a goal of reining in Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk.

Gerber, co-founder and chief executive of investment firm Gerber Kawasaki, confirmed his intentions during a Twitter Spaces audio conference Bloomberg hosted Friday. He said he's formally announcing his plans next week.

"I think it is crucially important to take criticism and this is something that I have realized over the years with Elon, you know, he's very thin skinned," Gerber said. "I've kind of had enough."

Musk and Tesla representatives did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Gerber did not say how he intended to secure the board seat. He said he had close relationships with some of Tesla's biggest institutional investors including Ark Investment Management LLC (0.15 percent) and Baillie Gifford & Co. (0.85 percent), but did not say if they specifically sup…

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Federal ‘right-to-repair’ bill reintroduced in House

WASHINGTON — U.S. Rep. Neal Dunn, R-Fla., reintroduced a bipartisan bill Thursday mandating that vehicle owners and independent repair shops have the same access to repair and maintenance tools and data as automakers and their franchised dealerships.

The bill — known as the Right to Equitable and Professional Auto Industry Repair Act — was previously introduced last year by Illinois Democratic Rep. Bobby Rush, who retired after his term ended Jan. 4.

The legislation would require all tools and equipment, wireless transmission of repair and diagnostic data and telematics systems needed for vehicle repairs be made available to the independent repair industry.

To ensure cybersecurity, it would allow automakers to secure vehicle-generated data and require NHTSA to develop standards for how that data can be accessed securely.

The bill would create a stakeholder committee with the authority to provide recommendations to the Federal Trade Commission on …

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Vehicle shipments skid 35% in January

The wholesale volume of new vehicles industrywide shrank 35 percent year on year to below 1.65 million last month, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers said on Friday.

The trade group blames the market contraction on the removal of government subsidies for electrified vehicles and tax cut on gasoline cars, and fewer working days due to the timing of the Chinese New Year holiday.

In January, shipments of light vehicles including sedans, crossovers, SUVs, multi-purpose vehicles and minibuses fell 35 percent to fall short of 1.47 million. 

The volume for new commercial vehicles such as buses and trucks plunged 48 percent to around 180,000. 

At the end of 2022, the subsidy program Beijing rolled out in 2010 for full electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids was phased out. 

In 2022, EVs were eligible for up to 12,600 yuan ($1,850) in subsidies, while plug-in hybrids qualified for a flat subsidy of 4,800 yuan. 

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DAILY DRIVE PODCAST: February 10, 2023

North America’s largest parts supplier saw an 80 percent drop in fourth-quarter profits. Honda says the semiconductor shortage is bottoming out, while GM scores a key microchip deal. Plus, a look at the problem with storing customer information on a salesperson’s cell phone and other dealership compliance no-no’s.

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To tap billions in U.S. subsidies, Tesla must unlock EV chargers

Tesla Inc. CEO Elon Musk has often talked about opening his Supercharging network to competitors, but has never actually done so in the United States, where the company dominates the electric vehicle market.

Now, the brash CEO may have 7.5 billion reasons to accelerate those plans.

The U.S. Department of Transportation next week is expected to finalize a requirement that will pressure Tesla to expand beyond its proprietary charging equipment in the U.S. and add the charger used by its competitors, administration officials tell Reuters.

Otherwise, the carmaker will be left out of the $7.5 billion in subsidies flowing out of Washington, part of President Joe Biden’s plan to blanket the nation with 500,000 EV chargers in the coming years, up from 100,000 in 2021.

The network is a central part of Biden's plan to tackle climate change by converting 50 percent of all new U.S. vehicle sales to electric by 2030. A dearth of chargers on U.S. roads has slo…

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Audi, Porsche, Mercedes-Benz and Chevy dealerships sell in 4 states

Partners sold two luxury dealerships after one decided to retire, a Washington group made its first acquisition since 2020, a Chevrolet dealership changed hands after nearly 50 years under family ownership, and another auto retailer expanded its luxury portfolio in transactions that took place throughout 2022.

Here's a look at the deals involving domestic and luxury brand dealerships in Michigan, California, Washington and Illinois. One of the transactions involved a retailer ranked on Automotive News' top 150 dealership groups list.

Longtime Michigan Chevy dealership trades hands

A dealership in Saline, Mich., changed hands April 20, when Bill Crispin and Debbie Crispin sold Bill Crispin Chevrolet to Monte Perkins, Timothy Jones and Timothy Rinke, according to a Michigan Secretary of State spokeswoman.

The store was renamed Saline Chevrolet.

"Today we sold Bill Crispin Chevrolet after 46 years of being the heartbeat of America," said a Fa…

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Renault Nissan revamped alliance is far from Ghosn’s vision, former exec says

TOKYO — The rebalancing of the Renault Nissan Mitsubishi alliance opens a new chapter for the long-uneasy Franco-Japanese partnership in the wake of the arrest of its former chairman.

But one man still fighting its past, former Nissan executive Greg Kelly, says the carmakers missed a golden opportunity to better strengthen their position as a leading global auto group.

Under the plan envisioned by former Chairman Carlos Ghosn, the alliance partners would have achieved unprecedented scale and Nissan would have assumed the leading role, said Kelly, the American director charged in Ghosn's 2018 alleged financial misconduct case.

"Nissan would have been first among equals," Kelly told Automotive News on Feb. 6, shortly before the companies unveiled their restructured cross-holding framework.

"I do think it relates back to everything that happened in 2018, and different visions for the group," he said. "Clearly, the vision for the group here looks to …

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Volkswagen investment planning round to take place Friday

BERLIN - Volkswagen's supervisory board will assemble on Friday for a planning round postponed from last November in which it will discuss plans for which models to produce at which plant, a source close to the company told Reuters on Friday.

The supervisory board will meet again in early March to conclude the plans and prepare to present them on March 14 in the carmaker's annual results conference, the source said.

The planning round, first reported by German business paper Handelsblatt, is the first since Volkswagen and Porsche Chief Executive Oliver Blume took over the company last autumn.

Among the topics on the agenda is whether to build a new factory for the Trinity model near its Wolfsburg headquarters, a plan conceived under former Chief Executive Herbert Diess but which was called into question at the end of last year.

The Volkswagen brand chief said in December that the carmaker would decide by early February whether to build the factory…

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Dealer skepticism meets Biden EV push

WASHINGTON — A large majority of dealers surveyed by Automotive News said they are taking steps to sell electric vehicles, but they have mixed opinions on the federal government's role in supporting the transition and accelerating consumer adoption.

Roughly 82 percent of the dealers are selling or preparing to sell EVs at their stores, according to responses in the 2023 Dealer Outlook Survey of 264 dealers and dealership managers. That's slightly higher than last year's results of about 80 percent in a survey of 196.

To get ready, most respondents surveyed in January said they have installed charging infrastructure, followed by purchasing and installing service department equipment and training or hiring technicians specifically for EV maintenance and repair.

While dealers said they're feeling pressure from automakers to invest in EVs and the necessary infrastructure and store upgrades to sell and service them, they also cited the Biden administration …

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Gentex to pay $4 million to resolve SEC charges involving employee bonuses

ZEELAND, Mich. — Automotive mirror supplier Gentex Corp. has agreed to pay $4 million to settle U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission charges involving the company's alleged accounting failures with executive and employee bonuses.

Additionally, CFO Kevin Nash has agreed to pay $75,000 to settle similar charges of violating the Securities Exchange Act.

The SEC announced the charges and settlement payments on Tuesday. The charges involved "financial reporting, books-and-records, and internal accounting controls violations arising out of the company's accounting for its executive and employee bonus compensation programs," according to the SEC.

Under the settlement, Gentex (Nasdaq: GNTX) and Nash agree to cease-and-desist orders in addition to the civil fines. The settlement neither admits to or denies the SEC's findings.

"We're pleased to have settled this SEC inquiry and to arrive at a resolution to put the matter behind us and to continue the j…

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Honda says chip shortage bottoming out but will drag on until latter half of 2023

TOKYO – Honda Motor Co. said the global semiconductor shortage is bottoming out but still cut its global sales forecast as it warned that tight supplies will likely drag into the latter half of 2023.

Japan’s No. 2 automaker trimmed 250,000 units off its sales outlook for the current fiscal year ending March 31, citing lingering chip woes and uncertainty about the pandemic in China.

Honda now expects worldwide volume to dip under the 4-million-level to 3.85 million units.

The new sales target would register as a 5.4 percent sales decline from the previous fiscal year – as opposed to Honda’s previous forecast for a slight overall sales increase.

The volume languishes far below Honda’s global production capacity of 5.14 million.

Speaking at Honda’s quarterly earnings announcement on Friday, Operating Executive Eiji Fujimura said the supply of semiconductors is expected to pick up, but only in the second half of the coming fiscal year. That co…

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