Public transit worries give automakers some hope amid virus pandemic

When Jason Rogers’ Buick Rendezvous blew its exhaust system and became undrivable last year, the cable-and-internet salesman and weekend songwriter decided he’d just take the bus to downtown Nashville from his home 10 miles south.

That 45-minute commute worked until the coronavirus hit U.S. cities starting in February. Then, Rogers said, he started renting cars by the week to avoid catching COVID-19 on the bus and bringing it home to his two children. With rental rates costing him $1,200 a month, the single father says he’s now looking to buy a car and stay off public transit.

“I have no interest in getting on the bus or a ride-sharing system unless I’m in a hazmat suit,” Rogers said in a phone interview. “I’m very much erring on the side of caution. I know where the car has been and who has been in it.”

Welcome to present-day America, where people are avoiding other humans and anything they might have touched, including steering wheels, bus railings and…

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China to reduce subsidies on new-energy vehicles 10%

BEIJING -- China will cut subsidies on new energy vehicles such as electric cars by 10 percent this year, the finance ministry said Thursday, following a decision last month to continue providing incentives to buy cleaner light vehicles.

The government had announced plans in 2015 to end the subsidies this year, but said in March it would extend them.

China has set a target for NEVs, which include plug-in hybrids and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, to account for a fifth of auto sales by 2025, compared with 5 percent currently, as it seeks to cut pollution and cultivate the domestic auto industry.

Under the new plan, China will extend subsidies on NEVs to 2022, and exempt sales taxes for two years.

However, the subsidies will apply only to passenger cars costing less than 300,000 yuan ($42,376). That is likely to exclude premium electric vehicles such as those built by Germany's BMW and Daimler.

Tesla Inc.'s China-made Model 3 sedans, meanwhile…

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Daimler expects Q1 earnings to plunge as virus hammers sales, production

Daimler said it expects first-quarter earnings to plunge as customers shunned Mercedes-Benz showrooms amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Preliminary quarterly earnings before interest and tax fell 78 percent to 617 million euros ($664 million), the automaker said in a statement on Thursday. Adjusted EBIT declined by 70 percent to 719 million euros ($774 million.)

Preliminary adjusted EBIT for Mercedes-Benz cars and vans fell more than 56 percent to 603 million euros ($649 million).

Daimler said it expects total unit sales and revenue for 2020 to be lower compared with last year.

Daimler's forecast provides further evidence of the financial damage inflicted by the pandemic on the auto market, as global vehicle sales and production get pummeled by tight restrictions governments have had to impose on business activity and the movement of people to control the spread of the virus.

Earlier this month, luxury rival BMW reported a 21 pe…

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Renault Q1 revenue falls 19%; outlook still unclear

PARIS -- Renault posted a plunge in first-quarter revenue and said it's too early to judge the impact the coronavirus pandemic will have on its earnings this year.

Revenue fell 19 percent to 10.1 billion euros ($10.9 billion), the company said in a statement on Thursday.

Renault is seeking billions in government-backed loans from the French state, its most powerful shareholder, which has pledged to help. To clear the way, Renault scrapped its dividend earlier this month.

Renault said it had 10.3 billion euros ($11 billion) of liquidity reserves, as of the end of March, 5.5 billion euros ($5.9 billion) less than at the end of 2019. The first quarter is traditionally a period when automakers use cash to bump up stocks.

Renault's vehicle sales in Europe fell 36 percent, compared with a 26 percent decline in the market. The low-cost Dacia brand showed the biggest drop.

Renault sold more cars in Russia than in its French home mar…

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Hyundai Q1 profit tumbles as coronavirus hits China demand

SEOUL -- Hyundai Motor said its first-quarter net profit slumped to its lowest quarterly level in a decade, as the coronavirus hit demand in China and losses at its financial business cut earnings.

Net profit fell 42 percent to 552.7 billion won ($448.7 million), the automaker said in a statement on Thursday.

As the coronavirus pandemic prompted governments to order lockdowns and other social distancing measures, consumer demand began tumbling in January -- first in China, then in South Korea and from March in Europe and the U.S.

Hyundai said first-quarter operating profit rose 5 percent to 864 billion won ($701 million) on a one-time gain related to its autonomous driving joint venture, along with a favorable currency environment and enhanced product mix as revenue climbed 6 percent.

Revenue was helped by a stronger product mix with higher sales of crossovers and Genesis luxury models. A weaker Korean won against the U.S. dollar offset …

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Ford loses marketing execs to Google, Facebook

DETROIT -- Ford Motor Co. is losing two director-level executives to a pair of tech giants.

Amy Marentic, a marketing and sales executive in charge of some of the automaker's key vehicles, is leaving for a position with Google. Separately, Crystal Worthem, head of global brand experiences and who helped Ford develop a key sponsorship with singing competition show "American Idol," is leaving for a position at Facebook.

It was not immediately clear when the moves take effect or if Ford plans to fill the positions.

"Both of them have done a variety of exceptional things, both domestically and internationally," Ford spokesman T.R. Reid told Automotive News late Wednesday. "We're sorry to see them go, but also flattered to see people from one leading company go to other leading companies."

Marentic for the past year has served as North America product line director for Ford's "Icons" line, which includes the Mustang, the new Mustang Mach-E electric cr…

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Auto sales show signs of recovery, J.D. Power says

Automakers are headed for a less-drastic U.S. sales collapse than feared, helped by online sales, 0 percent financing and other incentives, according to market researchers.

U.S. retail sales are down about 50 percent, a drop-off that wouldn’t be as steep as China or Western European countries saw in the first full month following their coronavirus outbreaks, according to Jeff Schuster, senior vice president of forecasting with LMC Automotive, a partner of J.D. Power.

“We’re now expecting a pattern that is more of a sustained level of a 40 percent to 50 percent decline over a longer period of time, instead of the really deep hit and then a relatively quick recovery,” Schuster said by phone.

The industry caught a break last week when Department of Homeland Security guidelines added vehicle sales to its list of essential services. All U.S. states now allow cars and light trucks to be delivered through showrooms or online, according to J.D. Power.

Re…

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Volkswagen to reopen Chattanooga plant May 3

Volkswagen of America said it plans to begin recalling workers at its Chattanooga assembly plant the evening of May 3, with production set to resume in limited fashion May 4.

The plant builds the Atlas and Atlas Cross Sport crossovers as well as the Passat sedan. Production at the Tennessee plant has been shut down since March 21, with employees placed on temporary emergency furlough on April 11.

Volkswagen said Wednesday that the factory's initial production schedule will be a five-day, eight-hour workweek for most shops. Shift and break times will be staggered.

The automaker will provide personal protective equipment for employees, institute temperature checks for those entering and exiting the plant, and keep six-foot distances between workers. It will suspend an internal shuttling service, add more cleaning of contact surfaces and replace the plated cafeteria with packed lunches.

Volkswagen's assembly plant in Puebla, Mexico, remains halted fo…

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Suppliers balance restart pressure with state stay-at-home orders

DETROIT -- French seating and interiors supplier Faurecia told employees this week that work will resume at a Michigan plant May 4, after earlier asking some employees to start work next week, while the state's stay-at-home order is still in effect.

As automakers make plans to ramp up amid COVID-19, many suppliers are caught between customer needs for parts to resume vehicle assembly and state orders limiting commercial activity to those necessary for sustaining and protecting life.

In Michigan, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer's stay-at-home order that prohibits public gatherings, motor boating and in-state residence-to-residence travel is in effect until May 1. The Michigan Manufacturers Association has asked Whitmer to amend her stay-at-home order to allow automakers and suppliers to resume production, CEO John Walsh said Wednesday.

While the order makes exceptions for transportation-related work, it doesn't explicitly endorse automotive manufacturing, said Wal…

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Hyundai vehicles sit in U.S. ports as virus keeps buyers away

SEOUL -- As Detroit's automakers shut production in March due to the coronavirus pandemic, South Korea's Hyundai Motor cranked up its factories back home to ship cars to the United States, a move that is proving costly for the world's fifth-largest auto group.

Hyundai ramped up domestic production to as much as 98 percent of capacity by late March, not only as the Korean market was recovering from a bad February but also because it bet on demand for Tucson crossovers and other models from U.S. customers, its biggest overseas market outside of China.

Hyundai shipped 33,990 vehicles to the United States in March, or 4.3 percent more from a year ago, according to company data.

While Hyundai is one of few global automakers whose production has recovered at home, its export optimism has been dampened by the severity of the U.S. outbreak, weak consumer sentiment that battered the industry, and as rivals have quickly moved to guard their turf. Read more

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Fiat Chrysler draws down on $6.8 billion credit facility

Fiat Chrysler Automobiles said Tuesday it had drawn down on a 6.25 billion euro ($6.8 billion) credit line to buffer its cash reserves during the uncertainty around the coronavirus health crisis.

The funds from the revolving credit facility, originally signed in June 2015, add to the 1.5 billion euros ($1.6 billion) FCA has drawn down from other credit lines.

The outbreak has pummeled vehicle sales and production for automakers across the world, forcing many to take out multi-billion dollar loans to ride out what is likely to be a deep global recession.

Ford Motor Co has drawn more than $15 billion from revolving credit lines and last week raised $8 billion from corporate debt investors to shore up its cash.

General Motors has entered into a 364-day revolving credit agreement of $1.95 billion, which the company said will be exclusively used by its financial services business.

Earlier this month Fiat Chrysler said it had …

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Webasto restarts some European plants

German supplier Webasto, which was hit hard in January by the coronavirus outbreak, this week restarted production at factories in Germany, Romania and the Czech Republic.

Some of those plants are already producing at 50 percent capacity and are poised to steadily increase that rate by early May, a spokeswoman told Automotive News Europe.

However, half of the roof system supplier's European factories and all of its U.S. plants remain closed.

The outlook for both Europe and the U.S. is that production will re-start at the dormant plants at a much-reduced volume by late April to early May.

All of the supplier's plants in China have resumed output and are producing at rates above 50 percent capacity, the spokeswoman said.

In the first two months of the year the company was shaken by an outbreak that infected 11 employees. All 11 people, of which nine were in Germany and two in China, made a full recovery.

Since mid-March, another 14 Webasto …

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