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Opinionopinion

Happy front as Frankfurt prepares for China arrival

Volkswagen poured a large bucket of cold water reality on perceptions of the state of the European car market.

Ford S-MAX

The glitz, strutting and general hype of this month’s Frankfurt motor show hadn’t even climaxed before Volkswagen poured a large bucket of cold water reality on perceptions of the state of the European car market.

The motor show did its usual best to wow people with shiny new models, much singing and dancing, and large dollops of strategic bluster, with industry big-wigs talking up prospects for recovery in general and (of course) their own firms in particular. The general line was that the European market had bottomed out, was now on its way up and that they could all look forward to sunnier days (with climate control as standard of course).

Enter VW and its large bucket of cold water. “Basically it’s ten (European) 10 factories that could be closed” said VW’s chief executive Martin Winterkorn in an interview with Reuters. It was a rude reminder of the dismal state of much of the European car market where overall sales are now at a 20-year low. According to McKinsey & Company, last year the West European industry lost around $1.3 billion. This year will be as bad if not even worse.

Now $1.3 billion across a whole industry doesn’t actually sound that bad if you’re used to Blackberry-sized losses. But remember that the German firms of VW, BMW and Daimler all stacked up huge profits (and JLR did well as well), so that means that the mass middle was bleeding copious amounts of red ink. Think of GM Europe, Ford Europe, Peugeot-Citroen and Fiat. Meanwhile Renault managed to break even only because of its budget brand Dacia.

The same old problem persists in that there are way too many plants across Europe producing way too many cars – and the manufacturers themselves have exacerbated the problem by building huge capacity in central and Eastern Europe. Even before the most recent downturn, manufacturers could only make and sell three out of four cars profitably; the fourth one had to be sold at a loss. This 25 per cent over-capacity problem hasn’t gone away and if anything will get worse as new entrants come in.

Indeed firms from Korea, Japan, and soon China are attacking the mass car producers from below, while the premium producers (mainly German owned but also JLR) are squeezing them from above, making smaller premium cars.

Meanwhile industry analysts Alix Partners reckon that car sales in Western Europe have fallen to below 12 million a year. The key driver of course is European economic weakness and the lack of consumer confidence. But as Alix Partners have noted, other significant market changes underway. Cars are lasting longer thanks to better quality and durability, so people change them less often, with the average age of a European car now over eight years.

Younger drivers also seem happy to eschew car ownership per se and just rent cars by the hour. That’s for now at least – whether this is a longer term trend is not yet clear. And many cash strapped manufacturers are extending product lives by revamping older products, which in turn fails to boost demand.