By testosteronepit
Europe with its relatively affluent population of 500
million has turned into a nightmare for the auto industry. And the
R-word—restructuring—unpalatable and almost illegal as it is in Europe, is
being bandied about, this time by Fiat-Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne, who, as
President of the European Automobile Manufacturers' Association, spoke for all
EU automakers. It was a dire warning and a cry for help.
"Horrible" was how he described the plight of the auto industry when he spoke at the European
Business Conference in Bruges, Belgium, on March 20. He predicted that auto
sales would sag by 5% in 2012, the fifth down year in a row. He didn’t see a
recovery before 2014. All-time-high gas prices are part of the reason. For that
debacle, and for how it sends French consumers and presidential
candidates reeling, read.... The $10-Per-Gallon Gas Has Arrived In Paris.
Perhaps Marchionne was fear mongering: his message was addressed to the EU Commission. The auto industry would have to restructure profoundly, and the Commission should take steps to allow and encourage it, he said.
New car registrations in February fell 9.7% across the EU compared to last year, worse even
than February 2009 at the trough of the financial crisis. It was the fifth down
month in a row. The results would have been even worse had it not been for an
extra selling day.
For January and February, registrations were down
8.3%. Some bright spots were tucked away at the fringes of the EU—Estonia was
up 21.2%, Hungary 31.8%, and Rumania 54%—but among the largest markets, only
Germany scraped by with a decline of 0.2%. Number two France and number three
Italy plunged 20.5% and 17.8% respectively. Among smaller markets, Portugal
swooned 47.9%. And in Greece, where hardly anything is sold anymore,
only 3,827 new vehicles were sold in February, down 45.2% from the already
traumatized level last year.
Marchionne’s cry for help wasn’t just about saving
Fiat whose EU sales dropped 16.7% so far this year. The whole industry would
have to cut capacity by 20%, or 3 million units, shutter ten or so plants, and
massively lay off workers. But that is precisely what you can’t do in the EU.
PSA Peugeot Citroën, whose February sales plunged
16.8%, re-announced at the Geneva auto show that it would solve its overcapacity over the
next two years. But layoffs and plant closings become highly politicized.
French Labor Minister Xavier Bertrand issued a stern warning to PSA CEO
Philippe Varin when word of talks with GM leaked out: layoffs as part of the
alliance would be out of the question. In November, President Nicolas Sarkozy
summoned Varin and told him to reconsider laying off 6,800 workers.
Layoffs will be even tougher to implement if socialist François Hollande wins
the election.
Whatever their thinking was at the time, GM and PSA
are now saying that Opel and PSA would each deal with its own overcapacity, and
that plant closings weren’t part of the alliance, which would focus on saving
money elsewhere. Chancellor Angela Merkel got personally involved in protecting
Opel factories during the financial crisis and brokered the sale of Opel to
keep GM from shutting it down. The deal fell apart, but the restructuring
agreement survived and prevents GM from closing any plants until 2014.
Individual countries prevent layoffs, Marchionne said
and added that the French government bailed out its automakers on condition
that they wouldn’t close any factories, whereas in the US, the opposite
happened: the government pushed GM and Chrysler to restructure during their
bankruptcies as part of the bailout. So he appealed directly to the EU Commission to liberalize labor markets because
individual countries wouldn’t do it.
Overcapacity pushes prices down, he said, and “that’s
why almost no one is making money in Europe.” Alas, VW, BMW, and Daimler are
basking in last year's record worldwide sales and profits. Even in Europe they
weren’t faring too badly, with Daimler up so far this year and VW and BMW down
a smidgen. Clearly, the situation is “horrible” for European automakers, but
there are those that can get through it and those that can’t. And those that
can’t—Fiat, PSA, Renault, Opel, and Ford—will have to restructure... or get
bailed out again.
Restructuring is already happening in Germany. The
most recent deal was Kiekert, the world's largest manufacturer of automotive
door-lock systems: a Chinese government-owned company bought it. A sea change
in the German auto industry. For that inexorable and stunning process, and the
fretting around it, read.... China, the
Number One Foreign Investor in Germany.
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