A Revolution in This Established Sector Marks The End of The Road For Blue-Chip Stocks!

The pace of change poses a major challenge to some of the biggest blue-chip companies on earth.

The automotive industry is going through a revolution as the shift to electric cars turns the world upside down.

The pace of change poses a major challenge to some of the biggest blue-chip companies on earth. Some will adapt, others could be driven off the road.

Electric wonderland

Not everybody believes in the electric car revolution. Sceptics point out that the two million electric cars sold in 2016 are a fraction of the 88 million global total. Electrics make up just 0.2% of cars on the road.

The revolution has a long way to go, but the International Energy Agency says it is picking up speed.

It predicts that between nine and 20 million electric cars could be fizzing around by 2020, and between 40 and 70 million by 2025.

In Norway almost one in three new cars are electric, thanks to state subsidies, showing how things speed up when governments get involved.

Plugged in

Norway wants to ban new fossil-fuel vehicles from 2025, with France and the UK aiming for 2040. Austria, China, Denmark, Germany, Ireland, Japan, the Netherlands, India, Portugal, Korea and Spain have all set targets for electric car sales, as have eight US states.

Swedish carmaker Volvo recently said all its vehicles will be either electric or hybrid by 2019. But what about the Germans?

Dirty diesel

Volkswagen, Daimler and BMW are giving it a go, making more than 100,000 purely electric cars for the first time this year plus 330,000 hybrids, according to PwC. However, they are stuck in the slow lane after choosing clean diesel technology as the fuel of the future.

They backed the wrong horse power, and that led directly to the diesel emissions scandal, as carmakers fiddled results to stay competitive.

BMW, Volkswagen and Daimler have seen more than €10bn wiped off their value since “Dieselgate” broke.

It could get worse as they face billion dollar fines for breaking US competition rules, plus billions of euros from the EU for fixing emissions and prices.

Out of gas

Bild, Germany’s biggest-selling newspaper, recently ran a headline warning of “The beginning of the end of our car industry”.

Instead, French-owned Renault is setting the pace, with the all-electric Renault Zoe spearheading the charge.

Germany invented the car and today its manufacturers employ 800,000 people. Cars make up one fifth of the country’s entire exports, so this is a big deal.

Electric cars have fewer parts than internal combustion engines, which also threatens German supply chains.

No direction

The Germans face another future shock, as they trail Tesla, Uber, Google and others in the race to build driverless cars. The Germans are engineers at heart, but software is the key to driverless motoring, not hardware.

The trend to autonomous vehicles could even destroy the whole notion of car ownership. Who wants to own an expensive, heavily taxed lump of metal that sits unused (and depreciating) for 95% of the day when you can whistle up a driverless car at will?

Now may be the time to drive the big German carmakers out of your portfolio before it’s too late.

More on Investing

woman looks ahead of her over water
Stocks for Beginners

What the Average Canadian TFSA Balance Looks Like at Age 50

Make the most of your self-directed TFSA portfolio and get an edge over Canadians neglecting the tax-free investment vehicle.

Read more »

Concept of multiple streams of income
Dividend Stocks

A TFSA Pick Yielding 7% With Dependable Cash Payments

This TSX income fund's monthly $0.10-per-share distribution is like clockwork.

Read more »

Piggy bank and Canadian coins
Tech Stocks

How to Use Your Annual TFSA Room to Double Your Contributions

Your 2026 TFSA limit is $7,000. But smart investors use quality stocks like Microsoft to make that room work twice…

Read more »

TFSA (Tax free savings account) acronym on wooden cubes on the background of stacks of coins
Dividend Stocks

The Simplest and Most Effective TFSA Strategy to Kick Off 2026

Add these two TSX stocks to your self-directed TFSA portfolio to get the right mixture of defensiveness and long-term growth.

Read more »

tsx today
Stock Market

TSX Today: What to Watch for in Stocks on Thursday, April 16

After four straight days of gains pushing the TSX closer to record highs, today’s flat opening signals investors may turn…

Read more »

some REITs give investors exposure to commercial real estate
Dividend Stocks

A 7.6% Dividend Stock Paying Cash Every Month

This TSX stock offers reliable monthly income with strong underlying fundamentals.

Read more »

c
Investing

This Canadian Stock Is Down 20% and Nearly Perfect for Long-Term Investors

Considering the essential nature of its service, its healthy growth prospects, and discounted stock price, this Canadian stock offers attractive…

Read more »

frustrated shopper at grocery store
Investing

This Canadian Stock Is 16% Off Its Highs and Built to Hold Forever

This Canadian company has been consistently delivering solid financials and significant long-term growth prospects.

Read more »