Last night's news ran a story that 600 new car dealerships had already closed and up to 2000 were in jeopardy. That translated to 70,000 people in the auto dealership industry that would be without jobs. I'm sure the 2k number is exaggerated but it is still a lot of people in one industry.
I know our industry is hard hit by the current turmoil. The big Three aren't anymore. The Big 3 for years have told dealers that they needed to merge selling territories or face insurmountable losses in the future, there are too many dealers.
Well, that time is here, the Seattle area "lost" 4 Dodge dealerships in the last month.
Let me define "lost" however, yes there are 4 empty buildings, but there is only one area that truly lost a Dodge store. The other three transferred to the neighboring Chrysler/Jeep dealer along with many of the employees. The commercial property will need to be sold, but in most cases the land is valued at huge multiples of what it was purchaed for. Many of the lots are in prime locations for other purposes. The land will sell.
These figures are lost on the news, that wouldn't be news if 4 dealerships weren't lost. One dealer closing isn't nearly as dramatic.
There were certainly too many franchises out there and yes there will be fewer, but the buying public will be better off in the future because more sound businesses will evolve, more solvent, most likely the guy in town that was the better dealer at more levels of his operation.
If Harley had three dealerships in the same geographic area as they currently have one, there would be Harley stores closing as well.
It is sad to see businesses closing, but the writing was on the wall many years ago (too many domestic dealerships) and no one was willing to do anything about it. Now the current financial crisis at the banks cause the lenders to tighten up and the dealer operators that aren't able to meet the tighter debt to equity standards are going away.
The free market has spoken in those cases and those operators have bet on the wrong horse.