Dumped Cars, EV Dreams: What We Learned at the Detroit Auto Show

The auto industry is undergoing the most upheaval since the advent of Henry Ford’s assembly line. The changes were as evident as the

meteor and sonic boom that rattled the frigid city of Detroit this week.

The rise of autonomy and electrification and

an exodus by Detroit’s hometown automakers from car segments loomed large at the North American International Auto Show. Here were some of the key takeaways:

Trucks Pay Bills

General Motors Co., Ford Motor Co. and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV stormed into show with overhauled pickups. GM revealed an all-new Chevrolet

Silverado pickup, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV introduced a new

Ram 1500 and Ford Motor Co. revived the

Ranger.

Ford Ranger

Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

Their devotion to trucks makes sense. The biggest rigs now command luxury vehicle-like prices and bring in estimated profit of at least $10,000 apiece. GM predicted that a revamped pickup and sport utility vehicle lineup will help keep earnings in 2018 consistent with last year’s record, and that results will be

even better in 2019.

Dead End

As trucks pad profit, Detroit automakers are discarding slow-selling passenger cars. Ford was the starkest it’s been in describing the direction it’s headed in this regard. It’s going to shift to a lower-volume, higher-margin lineup, a

momentous pivot from a century spent selling sedans to the masses.

Jim Farley

Photographer: Luke Macgregor/Bloomberg

“We know we must evolve to be even more competitive and narrow our full line of nameplates in all markets, to a more focused lineup that delivers stronger, more profitable growth, with better returns,” said Jim Farley, Ford’s president of global markets.

Foreign Cars King

Japanese and Korean automakers, meanwhile, will

double down on diminutive models, bringing out refreshed coupes and sedans that should reinforce their hold on U.S. car segments.

South Korea’s Kia Motors Corp. debuted its redesigned Forte compact car, while Hyundai Motor Co. unveiled the second iteration of its three-door Veloster model. Even the

shrinking full-size sedan segment saw some action, with Toyota rolling out an overhauled Avalon.

Hyundai Veloster N

Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg

Time to Electrify

With regulators from

Beijing to

Sacramento cracking down on the internal combustion engine, there are few skeptics still questioning whether electric vehicles are in their future.

“There is no doubt in my mind that once range increases, prices drop and a fast-charging infrastructure is in place, customers will prefer electric powertrains against combustion engines,” Klaus Zellmer, chief executive officer of Porsche Cars North America, said at the conference Automotive News World Congress on Wednesday.

Sergio Marchionne

Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg

Fiat Chrysler CEO

Sergio Marchionne, who once told a crowd in Washington he hoped they

wouldn’t buy the money-losing Fiat 500e, has changed his tune. Carmakers have less than a decade to reinvent themselves or risk being commoditized, he told Bloomberg News in an exclusive interview.

“We’re all in now,” Executive Chairman Bill Ford told reporters on Sunday after Ford announced it will

spend $11 billion to bring 40 electrified vehicles to market by 2022. PSA Group

echoed the sentiment, with CEO Carlos Tavares telling reporters Thursday that 50 percent of the company’s models will offer electric drive by 2020 or 2021 and all of them will by 2025.

Will There Be Buyers?

But for all the planning carmakers are doing to add battery-powered models to their lineups in the years to come, they’re also sweating over whether consumer demand will be there.

“We cannot force them to buy, and we cannot force the government to change,” Nissan Motor Co. President Hiroto Saikawa said in an interview. “What we can do is to properly prepare.”

There still aren’t many electric vehicles to choose from today, Ford’s Farley said. That’s going to change, just as the regulatory environment gets more stringent. “It all points to a market that will be more robust,” Farley said. “But it is not here today. It is a leap of faith.”

— With assistance by Jamie Butters, Gabrielle Coppola, and David Welch