China Daily (Hong Kong)

French PSA Group’s deal no quick fix for China market woes

- HAO YAN

After its recent purchase of the Opel and Vauxhall brands, French car manufactur­er PSA Group, which is partially owned by Chinese automaker Dongfeng Motor Co, is now under intense pressure due to its lackluster performanc­e in the world.

PSA’s revenue fell 1.2 percent last year to 37 billion euros ($39.36 billion) from 37.5 billion euros in 2015 globally.

In d u s t r y a n a l y s t s h av e warned that PSA’s purchase of Opel is likely to be anything but an instant cure for the company’s woes in China.

“As a new brand, it’s a tough job for Opel to beat SAIC GM in China,” said Shu Chang, principal at German firm Roland Berger Strategy Consultant­s’ Shanghai office.

“If Opel is introduced into the Chinese market, it will take some time for the brand to become establishe­d. It will need to learn to compete in the local market, strengthen its marketing, establish sales channels and localize research and developmen­t,” said Shu.

PSA announced last week the purchase of General Motor’s Opel and Vauxhall brands for 1.3 billion euros ($1.4 billion).

PSA said in a statement it was also buying GM Europe’s financial operations for 900 million euros in a joint deal with bank BNP Paribas.

With GM’s Opel and Vauxhall operations, PSA would become Europe’s second-largest carmaker behind Volkswagen.

SAIC General Motors has sold the Buick Regal, Excelle GT, Verano, and Chevrolet Malibu models in China and has managed to consolidat­e its market share. Opel’s models are on the exactly same platforms, with slight difference in tuning and configurat­ions.

A senior analyst at a securities firm, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said: “PSA and Dongfeng Motor are simply continuing to roll the dice on this, however Opel won’t help PSA in China because the domestic market for internatio­nal brands is already saturated.”

The analyst added that Peugeot and Citroen were competing with similar products on the same platforms, and battling with other joint ventures under the umbrella of China’s second-largest auto making giant, Dongfeng Motor Group.

Dongfeng Peugeot Citroen Automobile and Dongfeng Peugeot Citroen Automobile Sales, both based in Hubei province, made a combined profit of 3.6 billion yuan ($522 million) in 2016, 27.3 percent less than in the previous year.

Dongfeng Motor acquired a 14 percent stake in PSA for 800 million euros ($844 million) in 2014, and became one of the three main shareholde­rs in the group, along with the Peugeot family and the French government.

worldwide revenue of PSA Group last year

Zhou Liqin, media manager at Dongfeng Peugeot Citroen Automobile, said the two brands were carefully positioned and differenti­ated in the market and the joint ventures under Dongfeng Motor are sister companies generating “great synergy”.

“The two brands are focusing on different demographi­cs and are targeted at varied segments. The customers might not perceive the difference­s, but they certainly exist. For example, the Peugeot brand strengthen­ed its presence in the sport utility vehicle segment in 2016,” Zhou said.

She continued: “We are trying to expand the lineups of both brands this year to every segment from 100,000 yuan to 250,000 yuan, and both brands are going to be well balanced,” Zhou continued.

A staff member at Dongfeng Peugeot Citroen said the carmaker gave more incentives to sell Peugeot models than Citroen ones last year, which led to salespeopl­e maki n g e x a g g e r a t e d e ff o r t s t o promote the Peugeot brand. This included attempts to turn potential Citroen customers into Peugeot buyers.

Local media cited a Dongfeng Peugeot Citroen employee as saying that about 1,000 workers were transferre­d from the plant to Dongfeng Ho n d a A u t o m o b i l e , a n d attributed the switch to the Peugeot Citroen plant’s low sales volume.

Zhou said the transferre­d employees are a team of nearly 700 line workers and supervisor­s to support the Donfeng Honda plant, because Dongfeng Peugeot Citroen has reserved a certain capacity and number of personnel in preparatio­n for expected growth.

“We will have substantia­l developmen­t in the Chinese market this year. After the adjustment made last year, we are now, through increased focus on marketing, working to realize growth as soon as possible,” Zhou added.

Roland Berger’s Shu recommende­d heavier emphasis on branding as well as a rapid expansion of the company’s compact and SUV line-ups.

He a d d e d : “T h e Fr e n c h brands do not have a clearly defined image as far as Chinese consumers are concerned.” By contrast, German brands are synonymous with technologi­cal advancemen­t, Japanese brands are perceived as economical and US ones are known for their size and balanced characteri­stics.

“PSA has a lack of new products in the compact and SUV segments, which are the most popular segment in China.”

 ?? PASCAL ROSSIGNOL / REUTERS ?? An employee works on a van as it moves along the assembly line at the Peugeot Citroen PSA Sevelnord factory in Hordain, northern France.
PASCAL ROSSIGNOL / REUTERS An employee works on a van as it moves along the assembly line at the Peugeot Citroen PSA Sevelnord factory in Hordain, northern France.

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