Oman Daily Observer

Converge on China as rare slowdown looms

GLOBAL CARMAKERS

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Global carmakers converge on China for the Shanghai auto show with the industry bracing for a sharp sales slowdown and potential price war as competitio­n stiffens in the world’s biggest car market. Manufactur­ers have reaped a windfall as the fast-expanding Chinese middle class hits the road, but clouds loom as Volkswagen, Toyota, GM and other top nameplates pitch their latest models starting on Wednesday at China’s biggest auto showcase.

Passenger-vehicle sales have nearly quintupled over the past decade and logged another stellar performanc­e in 2016, surging 14.9 per cent to a record 24.38 million, according to the China Associatio­n of Automobile Manufactur­ers.

But volume was skewed upward in 2016 by a government purchase incentive. As China’s decades-long economic boom loses lift, sales growth will essentiall­y be flat this year and could even shrink in 2018 for the first time in memory, consultanc­y IHS Markit said last week.

In a boon for consumers, IHS Markit said there is already “a major price war descending on the market” as manufactur­ers and dealers slash prices to move growing stock.

“The threat now for internatio­nal automakers is that if local players begin cutting prices... there will be a rampant price war across the market as automakers compete to attract new car buyers,” it said.

Such troubles must be kept in perspectiv­e: China is still El Dorado for carmakers.

Last year’s sales set a 26th straight annual high-water mark, handily beating the record 17.55 million cars sold in the United States, which China zoomed past eight years ago to become the planet’s top market.

But sales were boosted government’s halving of a 10 by per the cent purchase tax on small-engine cars in late 2015. That tax has been raised to 7.5 per cent this year and will be restored to 10 per cent in 2018, with an expected dampening effect on sales.

DEATH BY SUFFOCATIO­N More broadly, analysts say China’s automotive landscape is rapidly maturing as consumer tastes evolve, and success will depend on manufactur­ers’ capabiliti­es in meeting those tastes.

China now has a crowded field of mostly domestic carmakers, many of which won’t survive, said Johan Karlberg, a Shanghaiba­sed partner with global consultanc­y Roland Berger.

“There’s just not room enough for that many players any more. Many of the smaller ones will simply die a slow, suffocatin­g death,” Karlberg said.

Major carmakers remain bullish, but are scrambling to introduce a slew of new models aimed at Chinese consumers during the Shanghai show, which IHS said has taken on “major importance” as the dynamics evolve.

Manufactur­ers are rushing in particular to capitalise on still fast-growing demand for sport-utility vehicles and “new energy” cars.

Chinese drivers have latched on to both domestic and foreign-made SUVs as leisure interests grow and rising incomes put a second family car in reach. SUV sales are expected to surpass sedans as early as this year.

Electric vehicle sales have been government-subsidised partly to help reduce China’s notorious air pollution, and the Chinese market is now the world’s biggest and growing quickly.

China market leader Volkswagen, along with giants GM, Ford and a host of electricca­r upstarts, all have plans to ramp up their China offerings.

Ford will even try to sell its Americanic­on pick-up trucks, while expanding its electric offerings.

“We think it’s a huge opportunit­y for us to continue to build the Ford brand here in China and continue to grow our business in China,” Ford CEO Mark Fields told Bloomberg News.

Analysts say other future drivers lie in China’s seemingly never-ending stock of newly-minted middle-class consumers, particular­ly in populous and fast-growing lower-tier cities, plus the rapid growth in car-hailing and vehicle-sharing services.

“We still have a pretty good period of growth ahead in the Chinese market. It is THE strategic market for global carmakers,” said Marc Mechai, an automotive analyst with Accenture in Paris.

“But now, it remains to be seen with which vehicles, and how.”

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