Listened to the sound clip. It's the squealing exhibited by a stiff belt due to cold temps. After a few seconds, the belt begins to warm up from friction and as the belt loses it's "frozen" bumps caused where it sits around pulleys and such when the engine is shut down.... the belt becomes more pliable and because it's then flat and pliable, making full contact consistently, there's no slippage and thus no squealing. Assuming the belt is showing no actual signs of wear, and everything is in proper alignment, then it comes down to a matter of how to stop the belt from squealing. Sadly, no amount of parts replacements is going to address this, aside from a potential consumable item.... the belt itself. I've experienced this on other vehicles and it has nothing to do with build quality. Replacing the belt with one of identical spec from the OEM manufacturer will result in the same problem All I can suggest is to change the belt to one that's of spec but made by a different manufacturer might work better, but that's speculation on my part. Something you can discuss with your dealer's service manager. It could be another item failing, but I'm highly suspect of that. I think when dealerships begin replacing pumps and pulleys, it's an act of desperation... literally grasping at straws. The service manual for the vehicle doesn't mention pumps as a source of squealing. It does mention the possibility of a pulley bearing failure or lack of pulley/belt alignment. Alignment issues would show some physical degradation of the belt itself. A failing pulley bearing would not, unless the pulley was completely seized... in which case it would cause belt damage. In the latter scenario you'd be able to smell it.