Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 27, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE B1
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CITY & BUSINESS
CITY EDITOR: SHANE MINKIN 204- 697- 7292 I CITY. DESK@ FREEPRESS. MB. CA I WINNIPEGFREEPRESS. COM
MONDAY, JULY 27, 2015 B 1
B RIAN Lowes believes he's
moving into the Mercedes-
Benz of car dealerships.
His new building on Rothwell
Road off Route 90 is about triple
the size of his old digs on Portage
Avenue, the lot is twice as large, and
there's enough space for almost three
times the vehicles.
Then there's the not- so- little matter
of location.
" I really wanted to be in the area
where people lived," said Lowes, the
president and owner of Mercedes-
Benz Winnipeg. " I wanted to be in
the heart of the community."
More specifically, Lowes' desire is to be
planted in the heart of Winnipeg's residential
boom. The south is where housing development
is most fertile. It's where IKEA set up
shop, along with a plethora of big- box stores.
It's where the money is moving.
Yet Lowes' relocation underscores two
long- standing trends: The slow death of
small, independent car dealerships in downtown
Winnipeg - or anywhere else - and
the growing clusters of car lots migrating to
the city's outskirts or suburbs.
" There's just not the space anymore," said
Geoff Sine, executive director of the Manitoba
Motor Dealers Association. " So you see
these auto parks come up, which is partly due
to space, but also it's a convenience for the
customer. It's a one- stop. There's a variety
of brands, and you can make an informed
decision."
All true. But consider that across Canada,
the average dealership breakdown is:
one- third are dealers who own five or more
stores, one- third are independent, and another
one- third own between two and four.
In Winnipeg, only a handful ( about six)
of the city's 45 new- car dealerships are
independent. The vast majority are part of
consolidated ownership groups.
For example, Lowes' old location at 2554
Portage Ave., which will be revamped into a
used- car lot, was once home to Robert Chipman's
Birchwood Motors - the first building
block in what was to become the Birchwood
Automotive Group, a 16- dealership conglomerate
now based just outside the west
Perimeter.
The Waverley Automall, at the intersection
of Waverley Street and Bishop Grandin
Boulevard, is home to 13 dealers.
Meanwhile, popular dealerships that once
occupied Portage Avenue near downtown are
extinct. Midway Chrysler, McNaught Motors,
Carter Motors, Gateway Motors, Terry Balkan
- all gone.
When Larry Vickar, president of Vickar
Auto Group, was asked if the era of the independent
" Mom and Pop" dealership owners
was coming to an end, he replied: " That possibility
is upon us, quite frankly. Even groups
today are getting bigger. Groups are buying
groups. I think that's life. I think because
of the high acquisition costs, it's harder for
someone to come into the business with a
stand- alone, certainly in the metro area.
" The movement of car dealerships is not
unlike almost all enterprises today," added
Vickar, whose group includes five dealerships.
" The aspects of individual ownership
are fewer and fewer in any sector of the
economy."
Chipman Automotive Group president
Steve Chipman called the ongoing evolution a
product of shrinking margins combined with
efficiencies from streamlining costs from
multiple outlets.
" It's like the corner store or the hardware
store. They're gone, too," Chipman reasoned.
" It becomes an economy of scale, the capital
involved. Our margins are shrinking. You
need volume."
In the past few decades, manufacturers
allowed dealers to sell for more than one
company. It was no longer treasonous for a
Ford dealer to open up a Toyota shop in the
same city. At the same time, however, manufacturers
began to mandate how dealership
showrooms looked - down to the floor tiles.
Noted Chipman: " Manufacturers have
building standards that are very expensive."
Over time, it became more advantageous
for dealers to look for ways to duplicate
services - marketing, auto- body repairs,
accounting - between multiple dealerships.
Independent owners who began in the 1980s
with no succession plan began to sell. Groups
such as Birchwood, Dilawri, Vickar, Murray
and Gauthier expanded. AutoCanada, the
only publicly traded auto group in Canada,
has 50 dealerships across the country, including
four in Winnipeg.
Meanwhile, the cheapest places to consolidate
are away from the city centre. Said
Chipman: " One, you need space. Two, you go
to where the people are."
In fact, the consolidation of car dealerships
may soon be reaching new levels.
In a recent edition of Canadian Auto Dealers,
a business trade magazine, an article
entitled Show Me The Money predicted the
days of larger ownership groups buying single
dealerships will be replaced by " dealer groups
seeking to acquire other dealer groups."
" I believe 2015 and 2016 will become a period
in history in which dealer group sales will
dominate the dealer consolidation market,"
wrote author Chuck Seguin. " Groups that for
the last 10 or 15 years have been on the acquisition
hunt will switch gears, change sides of
the table, so- to- speak, and become sellers."
Chipman contends the loss of the small
independent dealerships downtown - such as
where his father began - is neither for better
or worse. It's just business.
" There's pros and cons," he said. " The cost
of a vehicle today - and the safety features
- are way better than they were 30 years
ago, 10 years ago. They're more fuel efficient.
And as a percentage of your income, they're
way less.
" I think there's way more transparency. It
is better, but it's different."
One dealer, who wanted to remain anonymous,
said consolidation can help defray costs
to the consumer. But the cost may come in
terms of a business with fewer roots in the
community. " There is a concern, candidly,
that many of these parachuted- in dealerships
don't have a feeling to the local community
as far as involvement," he said. " It becomes a
hard- nosed business as opposed to a community
owned and family- type business."
Lowes, the incoming president of the
MMDA, agreed no matter how large dealers
become - or where they're located - the
long- term challenge remains the same.
" It's something that our industry, as it continues
to go towards the direction of consolidation,
the struggle is going to be, ' How do
we keep the personal touch?' " he said.
randy. turner@ freepress. mb. ca
The drive
to be
BIG Days of small, independent
car dealerships nearly gone
By Randy Turner
WAYNE GLOWACKI / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Brian Lowes shows off his Mercedes- Benz dealership's gleaming new showroom at 23 Rothwell Road, off Route 90. Below, a 1964 newspaper ad for the grand opening of Birchwood Motors on Portage Avenue.
B_ 01_ Jul- 27- 15_ FP_ 01. indd B1 7/ 26/ 15 7: 26: 08 PM
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