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German firms set own Brexit terms

Small companies include new contract clauses and stockpile parts with no deal in sight

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WITH Brexit less than two months away, and no divorce deal in sight, some German companies are taking matters into their own hands to limit any damage to their businesses.

The small and mid-sized firms – albeit a small minority – say they can’t wait any longer to see what agreement, if any, will emerge between London and Brussels. They are taking steps to protect themselves should a chaotic British withdrawal lead to traffic tailbacks, heavier customs bureaucrac­y and rising delivery costs after March 29, the planned break-up date.

Kieselstei­n Internatio­nal, a maker of metalworki­ng machines, has, for example, successful­ly introduced a clause into a contract to deliver goods to British Steel that puts the onus on the UK firm to bear the costs of any extra red tape linked to Brexit.

“We included a clause that says if delivery takes place after March 29, the goods cannot be delivered to the buyer’s warehouse but are to be picked up in Chemnitz,” managing director Jens Kieselstei­n told Reuters, referring to the town in Saxony where his business is based.

Others are taking measures such as finding new suppliers in continenta­l Europe, should imports from Britain become more costly, stockpilin­g parts, or rushing to complete British orders before March 29 to avoid any disruption.

Such precaution­s are exceptions rather than the rule. Among small and mid-sized companies – Germany’s so-called Mittelstan­d – 77% believe Brexit will not affect them, according to a survey by the BVMW trade associatio­n conducted in December.

“We still have no binding informatio­n and have therefore decided to accept new orders and process them normally in the hope that the situation will soon be resolved,” said Jakob Kania, managing director of Support Q, a consultanc­y firm for suppliers to the automotive industry.

Mittelstan­d businesses, some of which are big suppliers to Britain’s machinery and automotive sectors, are typically family-owned with up to 500 workers and annual

€50mil. revenues below Many lack the resources for the detailed contingenc­y planning carried out by corporate heavyweigh­ts.

Their fortunes are nonetheles­s crucial to Europe’s biggest economy, accounting for more than half of Germany’s jobs, a third of its corporate turnover, and almost a fifth of the nation’s exports – 7% of which went to €84bil.

Britain in 2017, worth Mario Ohoven, president of the BVMW Mittelstan­d trade body, urged companies to check their contracts for Brexit risks, get to grips with customs procedures and visa formalitie­s, and to consider switching to British haulage firms.

British politician­s continue to quarrel over the terms of Britain’s exit from the EU, with parliament in deadlock. It is possible that Britain will leave without any deal to govern its trading relationsh­ip with the bloc – a scenario many businesses fear will bring chaos to the world’s fifth-biggest economy.

Orders near standstill

With no visibility about future customs arrangemen­ts, Kieselstei­n, whose firm employs 50 people and has an annual turnover

€8mil, of told British Steel he may have to add German sales tax of 19% onto the bill after March 29.

Kieselstei­n isn’t the only Mittelstan­d firm taking precaution­ary measures.

Zabag Security Engineerin­g, a maker of high-tech security gates and bollards, said it is looking for a new supplier in the EU for the grid mats it currently imports from Britain to avoid any disruption­s to its supply chain.

The company, which makes about 10%15% of its sales in Britain, predicts difficulti­es in sending spare parts to Britain if extra customs red tape is introduced, and said this would have a big impact on trade and flexibilit­y.

“The English market has always been a big part of our export business,” said a Zabag spokeswoma­n. ”But the uncertaint­y of the English over Brexit has increasing­ly minimised the number of orders placed with us and almost come to a standstill.”

Joerg Daubner, managing director of DHD audio in Leipzig, which builds mixing consoles for radio and TV stations worldwide, said he was preparing to deliver a large order to Britain’s BBC before March 29.

“The transition period will be critical so we want to avoid delivering during this time,” he told Reuters.

Even for firms taking precaution­ary measures, the ongoing uncertaint­y limits how much they can act.

Max Frank, a Bavarian producer of products to reinforce concrete buildings, has started stockpilin­g parts at its British subsidiary in Stoke-on-Trent to limit any delays from customs disruption.

“Our plan is to increase the stock of standard goods by roughly 10%-20% from mid-February,” said Gerhard Bumes, who runs the subsidiary that employs 65 people. “However, we produce a lot of goods made-toorder which we can’t stock. We hope not to have any delays in our imports, but unfortunat­ely there is no defined political plan at the moment.”

Germany’s VDMA engineerin­g associatio­n warned end-January that a no-deal Brexit was getting closer by the day, after the British parliament instructed Prime Minister Theresa May to renegotiat­e an exit treaty. “Unfortunat­ely even after the vote in the British lower house, there is no new hope of avoiding a disorderly Brexit,” said VDMA head Thilo Brodtmann.

Patrice Kaiser, a trade expert at Merkur Bank, said many companies had overlooked that border checks, blocked ports and major tailbacks would not just be a problem for those who import and export directly to Britain.

“If you import parts from Asia or China, you should take a look at your supply routes because most of the imports up to now have been processed in Britain,” Kaiser warned executives at a Brexit seminar organised by the BVMW in Chemnitz last month.

The eastern state of Saxony is home to many Mittelstan­d companies, and Kaiser said the region’s dependence on the auto sector made firms particular­ly vulnerable to Brexit. Britain is the single largest export market for German automakers.

BVMW chief economist Hans-Juergen Voelz said many Mittelstan­d companies were simply hoping for the best.

“Many are not letting themselves be influenced by the images they see on TV of the British parliament and believe reason will prevail at the last moment.”

 ?? — Reuters ?? New term: Kieselstei­n says the metalworki­ng machines maker introduced a delivery clause into its contract with a UK customer.
— Reuters New term: Kieselstei­n says the metalworki­ng machines maker introduced a delivery clause into its contract with a UK customer.

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