Eric Sills
Analyst · Center for Performance and Investing. Your line is now open.
Good morning, Robert. And it's a great question. And it's certainly one that we spend a great deal of time thinking about and preparing for internally. We're certainly seeing more news recently, whether it's the General Motors announcement of what they're planning to do with their fleet by 2035 and just so many other car manufacturers preparing for that. We recognize that it's not – it's not and if it's a win. We do think that win is still many years out. Again, General Motors is looking at 2035 and that's really for new car sales and as largely an after-market manufacturer we have a pretty good lead time, even after that, before it has any significant impact on the addressable market on the car park. But look, we definitely see that it’s coming. So as we look at our product portfolio and make sure that we’re evolving along with automotive technology, perhaps, it’s helpful to break it into its components. If you look at our temperature control division at essentially immune, there are some slight technology changes on AC systems for electric vehicles, but for the most part, it’s still out there. And on engine management, we really see more and more of that division really having little to do with the engine. So we’re seeing much more as it relates to safety related devices, whether it’s older technologies like ABS sensors are getting into the new technologies with all of the advanced driver assist systems we’re seeing on vehicles, where we are already offering hundreds and hundreds of SKUs to support cameras, lane departure systems, and so on and so forth. So we see as the potential for ice related components to contract, we hope that there are replacement – that there are product categories that are there to replace that business. And that potentially also includes parts to service that electric vehicle powertrain. It’s also important to note, and I think you’re aware of this, that much of the electrification going on, certainly for the near-term is hybrid vehicles, where there is a combustion engine on board, along with the electric motor. But yes, we continue to look to evolve and with these new systems comes new technologies and new parts opportunities, so for example, there’s going to be much more related to battery cooling, which we think is in our wheelhouse to power management battery sensing technology and so on, which we think is in our wheelhouse, and again, more and more emphasis on different types of sensors and actuators throughout the vehicle. So we’ve been evolving with automotive technology for a hundred years. We plan to continue to do it. We think we have a several year lead time before there’s significant impact in the addressable market, but we’re by no means ignoring it, we’re addressing it and preparing for it.