Contest highlights ‘Women Driving Auto Retail’
Portion of the video submission from Morrie’s Automotive Group. Screenshot from: NADA. Thursday, Feb. 11, 2021, 03:50 PM By Auto Remarketing Staff
The auto industry has been very rewarding for Jaime Drabzcak.
“So what I would say to anybody considering it: Try it. You probably will fall in love with it,” said Drabzcak, who is general manager of Morrie’s Automotive Group in Minnetonka, Minn.
Drabzcak made those comments as part of a video submission from her dealer group to the National Automobile Dealers Association’s 4th annual Women Driving Auto Retail Video Contest.
NADA on Wednesday announced Morrie’s as the contest winner during NADA’s first-ever Women Driving Auto Retail Virtual Happy Hour. NADA held the event in conjunction with NADA Show 2021.
(Bloomberg) Japan’s major automakers have cut production at various factories due to the worsening global semiconductor shortage brought about as chipmakers…
How the global chip shortage is impacting domestic carmakers Sorry, but your browser needs Javascript to use this site. If you re not sure how to activate it, please refer to this site: https://www.enable-javascript.com/
Japan’s major automakers have cut production at various factories due to the worsening global semiconductor shortage. | BLOOMBERG
Bloomberg Jan 14, 2021
The country s major automakers have cut production at various factories due to the worsening global semiconductor shortage brought about as chipmakers struggle to meet soaring demand from consumer-electronics companies.
Lockdowns and travel restrictions are prompting housebound shoppers to snap up more phones, game consoles, smart TVs and laptops, which in turn has fueled demand for the chips used in those devices. That means carmakers from Toyota Motor Corp. to Volkswagen AG are at risk of not getting enough parts to fuel a fledgling recovery in their own industry.
(Jan 14): Japan’s major automakers have cut production at various factories due to the worsening global semiconductor shortage brought about as chipmakers struggle to meet soaring demand from consumer-electronics companies.
Lockdowns and travel restrictions are prompting housebound shoppers to snap up more phones, game consoles, smart TVs and laptops, which in turn has fueled demand for the chips used in those devices. That means carmakers from Toyota Motor Corp. to Volkswagen AG are at risk of not getting enough parts to fuel a fledgling recovery in their own industry.
That’s forced automakers all around the world to cut back on production.
Read more about Global chip shortage hampers Japanese automakers production and recovery on Business Standard. Lockdowns and travel restrictions are prompting housebound shoppers to snap up more phones, game consoles, smart TVs and laptops, which in turn has fueled demand for the chips