Most automakers predict missed EV sales goals, slower transition in Kerrigan survey

Written by:
Gail Kachadourian Howe
July 25, 2024

Kerrigan Advisors' 2024 OEM survey asked automaker executives about EV sales, dealer profitability and the franchise system.

The majority of automaker executives in Kerrigan Advisors' 2024 Kerrigan OEM Survey said they believe their companies won't meet proposed electric vehicle sales goals and the transition to EVs from gasoline-powered vehicles will be slower than initially projected in the U.S.

Kerrigan's second annual survey included more than 110 U.S. automaker executives' responses from December 2023 through May. Questions focused on EV sales, dealer profitability and the franchise system.

Two-thirds of respondents expect their companies won't meet their proposed EV sales goals and 81 percent say the EV transition will take more time.

Erin Kerrigan, managing director of Kerrigan Advisors, a dealership sell-side advisory firm in Incline Village, Nev., said the results were surprising, especially that 86 percent of auto manufacturer executives who said their company is making contingency plans for more internal combustion and hybrid vehicles if EVs do not penetrate the market as successfully as expected.

"For a dealer, it just means that the legacy ICE business, and the threats to, for instance, fixed operations and the risk factors to that and shifting to EVs are probably a long way out," she said. "It's more steady-as-you-go for dealers with the bread-and-butter ICE business than was expected last year."

Price is an issue

Kerrigan said the results showed high prices as the No. 1 reason executives thought EV sales were lagging, higher than the lack of charging infrastructure or consumer demand. That sentiment could change by next year, she said.

"It's likely if EV prices continue to decline, this [pricing] will be less of an impediment to EV sales," Kerrigan said, adding that "the legacy OEMs' pricing on EVs is really out of step relative to the market leader in EVs being Tesla."

Tesla Inc. has cut pricing on its EVs several times, including as first-quarter sales lagged and inventory piled up.

Facility requirements

The survey also showed a drop in the percentage of automaker executives who foresee an increase in dealership facility requirements. That number was 18 percent in 2024, down from 32 percent in 2023.

"The vast majority of executives surveyed, 60 percent, now believe facility requirements will remain the same, while a higher percentage, 22 percent, see a decline in requirements, perhaps as EV charging infrastructure investments become a less critical OEM priority," according to Kerrigan Advisors.

Ford Motor Co., for example, in June nullified a Model e program that required dealers to comply with facility requirements to sell EVs.

Profitability

In other findings, respondents said they see dealership profitability starting to normalize this year, with 54 percent anticipating a decline in the next 12 months, Kerrigan said. Forty-one percent of executives expected dealership profits to remain stable over the same time, compared with 24 percent in the previous survey.

"The majority of the respondents, 62 percent, said they expect the gross margins on new vehicles to normalize above 2019 levels, so that's also a really good indication of where we're going to be as an industry," Kerrigan said.

Seventy percent of executives surveyed said they believe the industry's days' supply of new-vehicle inventories in the next 12 months will reach an average of 60 to 90 days, which she said is consistent with current levels, but an "about-face""from the 38 percent of executives who said so last year.

The agency model

Compared with the previous survey, there also are significantly more executives rejecting the notion of an agency model coming to the U.S. in the next five years.

"They recognize now as inventories pile up on dealers' lots, particularly EV inventories, that they don't want to have that role going forward," Kerrigan said. "They much prefer to have the dealers play that part that they have so successfully done for decades in our industry."

More automakers, 19 percent, said their companies would own the primary customer relationship and most customer data in the next five years. That was an increase of 16 percent year over year.

"That trend is a little surprising, although if you look at it, still the vast majority, 67 percent, believe that both the dealer and the OEM will own that relationship with the customer and the customer data," Kerrigan said.

About Kerrigan Advisors

Kerrigan Advisors is the leading sell-side advisor and thought partner to auto dealers nationwide. Since its founding in 2014, the firm has led the industry with the sale of over 275 dealerships representing nearly $9 billion in client proceeds, including the third largest transaction in auto retail history – the sale of Jim Koons Automotive Companies to Asbury Automotive Group. The firm advises the industry’s leading dealership groups, enhancing value through the lifecycle of growing, operating and, when the time is right, selling their businesses. Led by a team of veteran industry experts with backgrounds in investment banking, private equity, accounting, finance and real estate, Kerrigan Advisors does not take listings, rather they develop a customized sales approach for each client to achieve their personal and financial goals. In addition to the firm’s sell-side advisory services, Kerrigan Advisors also provides a suite of consulting and investor services including growth strategy, market valuation assessments, capital allocation, transactional due diligence, open point proposals, operational improvement and real estate due diligence.

Kerrigan Advisors monitors conditions in the buy/sell market and publishes an in-depth analysis each quarter in The Blue Sky Report®, which includes Kerrigan Advisors’ signature blue sky charts, multiples, and analysis for each franchise in the luxury and non-luxury segments. To download a preview of the report, click here. The firm also releases monthly The Kerrigan Index™ composed of the seven publicly traded auto retail companies with operations focused on the US market. The Kerrigan Auto Retail Index is designed to track dealership valuation trends, while also providing key insights into factors influencing auto retail. To access The Kerrigan Index™, click here. To read the 2023 Kerrigan Dealer Survey, click here. To read the 2024 Kerrigan OEM Survey, click here. Kerrigan Advisors also is the co-author of NADA’s Guide to Buying and Selling a Dealership.

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