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AutoCanada overhauls executive ranks as it gets walloped by Alberta economy

AutoCanda CEO Tom Orysiuk, pictured, will stay on as president as Steven Landry takes over the chief executive position.

Edmonton-based dealership group AutoCanada Inc. is undertaking a management overhaul in the middle of a major sales slump, using the company predicting conditions can get worse prior to them getting better.

The company announced that Steven Landry – who previously spent 27 years at Chrysler Group, including a stint as president of Chrysler Canada – will require over as CEO on April 1. He’ll replace Tom Orysiuk, who will stay on as president. Company founder Pat Priestner will leave his executive chairman position being non-executive chairman, one step towards retirement in 2017.

The shuffle comes as the company struggles through probably the most challenging periods in its 20-year history. Nearly half of AutoCanada’s dealerships have been in Alberta, where vehicles sales have gone into a tailspin combined with the price of oil.

In your fourth quarter, the company reported an internet lack of $7.4 million or $0.29 per share. Same-store revenue fell 12.1 percent and same-store sales of recent vehicles plunged 21 per cent.

The company said it expects 2016 to become even “more challenging than this past year.”

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