Business Standard

Takata bankruptcy would cloud auto industry’s biggest recall

- KEVIN BUCKLAND , MASATSUGU HORIE & RYAN BEENE 24 June

The expected bankruptcy of troubled air-bag maker Takata isn’t just a crisis for its employees and suppliers. It also throws a wild card into one of the biggest and most complicate­d recalls in automotive history.

The Japan-based auto supplier has pledged to recall and replace tens of millions of defective air-bag inflators used by 19 car and truck makers around the world, from Tesla to Toyota Motor. A filing to restructur­e in US bankruptcy court, which could come as early as Monday according to people familiar with the matter, doesn’t relieve a manufactur­er of recall responsibi­lities. However, should its financial assets be exhausted before all the work is done, carmakers may have to cover the difference.

US bankruptcy laws permit a wouldbe buyer to acquire Takata’s desirable assets, but not necessaril­y assume unwanted liabilitie­s — including recall obligation­s, according to Robert Rasmussen, a University of Southern California law professor specialisi­ng in corporate reorganisa­tions.

Funds raised by an asset sale would go toward funding Takata’s production of replacemen­t parts, Rasmussen said. US law treats a manufactur­er’s recall obligation­s in bankruptcy as a claim of the US government and they receive priority “to ensure that consumers are adequately protected from any safety defect” in a manufactur­er’s products, according to statute.

“The big risk,” Rasmussen said, “is how much are the assets worth versus what’s the cost to do the replacemen­ts.”

Scott Upham, president of Valient Market Research, estimates that automakers and suppliers globally face $5 billion in future costs tied to the recalls, about $2 billion of which can be tied to Takata. He estimates a Takata asset sale will generate about $1.5 billion to $2 billion.

“There’s not enough money,” Upham said. Automakers may have to cover any shortfall, he said.

The car companies have already shifted business away from Takata and toward rivals for about 70 per cent of the parts to repair the millions of vehicles recalled for the company’s defective airbag inflators, which can explode with too much force and spray drivers and passengers with metal and plastic shards. That should assure enough new inflators for the estimated 100 million defective ones forecast to be replaced worldwide.

Only 38 per cent of the 43 million air bag inflators under recall in the US had been repaired as of May 26, according to data on the US Department of Transporta­tion’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion website. In Japan, 73 per cent of the close to 19 million air bags under recall have been repaired, a spokesman at the country’s transport ministry said this month.

At least 17 deaths have been linked to the devices worldwide. Mounting liabilitie­s associated with the faulty airbags have forced Takata to seek a buyer that would see it through a costly restructur­ing process. A Takata steering committee has recommende­d Key Safety Systems — the US air-bag maker owned by China’s Ningbo Joyson Electronic — as the preferred bidder, and bankruptcy filings would bring the Japanese company a step closer to a sale.

The challenges for the acquirer are manifold. Takata posted its thirdstrai­ght annual loss even without including the full costs of repairing millions of air bags, which automakers are now paying for. It faces a talent exodus and auto industry distrust.

“It would be hard for Key Safety Systems to put in huge amounts of money if there’s no guarantee against unexpected liabilitie­s, after any deal,” said Mitsuhiro Harada, a researcher at Tokyo Shoko Research. “Takata is making money in non-airbag operations, so if they can drasticall­y cut recall-related debt through bankruptcy, they can surely revive soon.”

Automakers have avoided supply disruption­s by sourcing replacemen­t parts from Takata competitor­s Autoliv, ZF-TRW and Daicel. Autoliv, for example, has already provided 15 million replacemen­t inflators and has orders for another 15 million into 2019, company spokesman Thomas Jonsson said.

“We are working with suppliers to ensure a steady supply of replacemen­t inflators for our customers,” said Kelly Stefanich, a Toyota spokeswoma­n in Princeton, Indiana. “We don’t anticipate any supply disruption­s at this time.” Honda CEO Takahiro Hachigo said at a June 16 media briefing that the automaker hasn’t heard any specifics about the Takata bankruptcy plan.

The Japanese government has said it’s focused on completing the recall process and ensuring there’s no disruption of the supply chain.

In the US, NHTSA has been coordinati­ng the pace of recalls and the flow of parts under a legally-binding 2015 agreement with Takata and 19 companies. That pact, NHTSA said, “is designed to deal with future contingenc­ies, including the possibilit­y of additional recalls, new informatio­n about the cause of the ruptures, or interrupti­ons in the supply of replacemen­t inflators.”

“The automakers, the government, Key Safety Systems and Takata will come to an agreement to keep supplies flowing,” Upham said. “The No 1 priority is the safety of the driving public, and I think everybody realises that.”

Honda first started recalling Accord and Civic models in 2008 due to the flaw that may end up being Takata’s undoing. The supplier’s inflators use ammonium nitrate propellant that can be rendered unstable after long-term exposure to heat and humidity. That same year, Takata began adding a drying agent to its propellant formula in an attempt to fix the problem. It has until the end of 2019 to prove to US regulators that those air bags are safe. BLOOMBERG

 ?? REUTERS ?? A file photo of Takata Chief Executive and President Shigehisa Takada
REUTERS A file photo of Takata Chief Executive and President Shigehisa Takada

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