Tesla's move to close stores puts dealer franchise debate into spotlight

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For years, Tesla CEO Elon Musk has repudiated state laws that prevent car manufacturers from owning and operating stores to sell vehicles directly to consumers.

On Thursday, the company took a divergent strategy, moving worldwide sales for its $35,000 Model 3 online, and announcing plans to shutter an unspecified number of its 131 physical stores. “Shifting all sales online, combined with other ongoing cost efficiencies, will enable us to lower all vehicle prices by about 6% on average,” Tesla said Thursday in a press release.

Tesla (TSLA) plans to keep a number of its stores open and transform them into galleries or information centers where customers can both see and learn about vehicles, first hand, a Tesla spokesperson told Yahoo Finance, adding that the transition is expected to take several months. The decision will test Tesla’s ability to maintain strong sales without physical locations where it can sell vehicles directly to consumers. The move will also likely draw legal challenges, stock research firm JMP said in a report.

“Tesla’s company-owned stores have required special exemption from decades-old dealer franchise laws,” said JMP. “While Tesla will likely assert that it indeed will have sufficient resources to maintain the consumer safety of the fleet, we expect a number of legal challenges to this move.”

What form those legal challenges would take is unclear.

Tesla said it plans to increase investment in its vehicle service capability and use mobile technicians in the absence of physical service locations. “[W]e guarantee service availability anywhere in any country in which we operate,” the company said.

“We will be significantly increasing headcount in service technicians,” Musk added Thursday during a conference call with reporters.

The laws, which Musk has been fighting, were enacted between the 1930s and 1950s in efforts to stop the Big Three (Ford, General Motors and Chrysler) from strong arming dealerships into purchasing more product than demand warranted. Essentially, the intent of the law was to protect dealerships from assuming the bulk of the risk in franchise relationships. As part of the parties’ negotiated remedies, states adopted laws prohibiting car manufacturers from direct-to-customer sales. The idea is that it would prevent manufacturers from directly competing with franchisees.

“If [Tesla’s] now saying they really don't want to rely very much on bricks and mortar at all, it does seem to me to at least in part moot this whole question about direct distribution,” said University of Michigan law professor Dan Crane, who has worked closely with Tesla on dealership laws since 2014. (Crane has never been retained by or received compensation from the company.)