How will Big Auto’s EV push affect car dealers?

An EV future means less services revenue for auto dealers (and upfront costs to become green certified).

You may have heard: Old industry carmakers are going all-in on electric vehicles (EV).

How will Big Auto’s EV push affect car dealers?

Per CNBC:

  • GM plans to spend $27B on EV models through 2025 (and wants to be all EV by 2035)
  • Ford is dropping a cool $22B on EVs and is aiming for a 40% plug-in fleet by 2030

Among the most-affected groups by this green auto shift:

Thousands of franchise auto dealers across America

Ford has ~3k while GM has ~4k… and these shops are bracing for a few huge changes:

  • Less service revenue: EVs have fewer parts than internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles and don’t require oil changes or transmission repairs. Per CNBC, servicing of ICE cars makes up 50% of a dealer’s gross profit, which is a big hit.
  • Pricey green certification: Auto dealers will also have to retrain their staff and upgrade their facilities for EV sales. Costs to do so can run from $50k to $300k+.
  • D2C sales: EV leader Tesla does all sales online. And while auto dealers have websites, their core business remains the classic in-person question: “What brings you to our lot today?”

While <3% of US new car sales are currently EV…

… the shift away from oil is inevitable. A Bloomberg report projects EVs to account for 58% of all new global passenger vehicle sales by 2040.

Auto dealers are already adapting to the shift, with 2.3k Ford dealers in the US already plunking down $50k to be EV-certified.

But, really, nothing says inevitable like the frunk space in the Ford’s electric truck (F-150 Lightning)… that’s bottomless space for BBQ equipment.

Source: Repair Driven News / Ford
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Topics: Vehicles

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