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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Coronavirus spread starts to hit US auto dealers

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DETROIT: A relentless barrage of bad news surrounding the coronavirus epidemic has begun to affect customer visits at some US auto dealers and even those businesses that have thrived so far believe a big sales decline is imminent if China’s experience is any guide.


Since the coronavirus outbreak began in China last year it has killed more than 5,000 people globally, including 41 so far in the United States, where President Donald Trump on Friday declared a national emergency.


The outbreak has caused automakers to shutter plants in Asia and Europe, and the mounting responses in the United States — school closures, pro sports leagues suspending play and other big events cancelled — are now being felt by some US dealers. For a sign of what may be in store, analysts said look no further than China, where auto sales plunged 79 per cent last month.


“Sales are definitely falling,” said John Luciano, managing partner with Street Volkswagen in Amarillo, Texas, and chairman of Volkswagen’s national dealer council. “We’re waking up in a different world a little bit more every day’’.


At Russ Shelton’s Buick GMC dealership in Rochester Hills, Michigan, so far this month customer visits are down 30 per cent while the service department has seen a 40 per cent drop in business due to the outbreak.


“When schools close, mothers get worried — and this stops economic activity,” former GM executive Warren Browne said.


Cox Automotive now sees negative US economic growth in the second quarter and has withdrawn its forecast for 16.6 million new-vehicle sales in the United States this year.


Even businesses whose sales have remained strong acknowledge this week could mark the beginning of a big decline.


“It’s going to happen,” Beau Boeckmann, president of Galpin Ford in the Los Angeles area and one of the largest US Ford dealers, said of a potential drop in sales. “We’re kind of still in this odd wait-and-see moment’’.


Ford Motor Co Chief Operating Officer Jim Farley and other executives outlined on a Friday call with dealers how the outbreak has not interrupted US vehicle production and sales through last weekend finished ahead of company projections, according to dealers on the call. — Reuters


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