Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

VW CEO fears chip crunch will persist for many more yrs

- Bloomberg feedback@livemint.com

BERLIN: First, carmakers thought the worst of the chip shortage would be in the first half of the year. Then, it was the third quarter. Now, the heads of Germany’s automakers are pushing back even further their estimation­s of when the supply issue will stop constraini­ng car production.

“Probably we will remain in shortages for the next months or even years because semiconduc­tors are in high demand,” Volkswagen AG chief executive officer Herbert Diess said Monday on Bloomberg Television. “The internet of things is growing and the capacity ramp-up will take time. It will be probably a bottleneck for the next months and years to come.”

Diess and his counterpar­ts Ola Kallenius at Daimler AG and Oliver Zipse of BMW AG, delivered their doses of distress as most European carmakers gathered in Munich for the first auto show since before the pandemic hit.

Daimler AG’s chief executive officer cautioned that the global semiconduc­tor shortage may not entirely go away next year and could take until 2023 to be resolved, a view shared by larger German rival Volkswagen AG.

Ola Kallenius, CEO of the Mercedes-Benz maker, delivered the assessment during a press briefing with reporters for this week’s auto show in Munich. Daimler recently cut its annual sales forecast for its car division, projecting deliveries will be roughly in line with 2020, rather than up significan­tly.

Kallenius cautioned on Sunday that the semiconduc­tor shortage may not entirely go away next year and could take until 2023 to be resolved. Zipse warned the crisis could last six to 12 months.

VW and Mercedes are among the automakers that have been hit this quarter by factory shutdowns in Malaysia, which in recent years emerged as a major hub for chip testing and packaging.

Key suppliers including Infineon Technologi­es AG, NXP Semiconduc­tors NV and STMicro-electronic­s NV operate plants in the country.

There is hope that the situation starts to ease in the fourth quarter, Daimler’s Kallenius said, though he anticipate­s fallout from a “structural” demand issue also will influence industries in 2022. A Japanese chipmaker that supplies to Toyota Motor Corp. similarly predicted last month that the supply crunch could last through all of next year.

The auto industry worldwide will need roughly 10% more production capacity for chips, Murat Aksel, VW’s purchasing chief, told reporters late Sunday.Diess said Monday that VW hopes to overcome issues brought about by the Covid-19 outbreak in Malaysia “toward the end of this month, probably next month, and then recover in the last quarter of this year.”

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Herbert Diess, chief executive officer, Volkswagen AG.
BLOOMBERG Herbert Diess, chief executive officer, Volkswagen AG.

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