BusinessMirror

Brexit’s one (car) accident waiting to happen

- By Anjani Trivedi

AuTOMAkERS, Brexit isn’t your only problem. Honda Motor Co. is planning to shut down its Swindon plant in the united kingdom in two years, a local member of Parliament said on Twitter. (See related story on B3). On Tuesday, Honda confirmed it will close the site where it makes 150,000 Civics a year, citing “unpreceden­ted changes” in the industry for its global restructur­ing. The company also said it will stop producing the Civic sedan in Turkey, where it makes about 38,000 units a year.

It’s unlikely Brexit is to blame. No doubt, prospects are scary for the European auto market, with upheaval across supply chains and potential tariffs posing a real threat. Cross-border auto trade is almost $70 billion a year, according to analysts at Nomura Holdings Inc. But since 2016, there’s been no tangible change to businesses’ operations; the major impact has been from the value and volatility of sterling, as Brexit’s outcome remains in limbo.

Honda’s car sales in Europe (which includes the uk, Germany, Belgium, Turkey and Italy) have been sagging for a while, down around 5 percent in the third quarter. Operating profit from the region remain tiny compared with Japan and North America, accounting for less than 1 percent of the total in the quarter ended December 31. Net income margins overall have been shrinking, too. The company’s market share fell to less than 1 percent last year from around 2 percent in 2006. A hard Brexit is expected to shave just 1 percent off net profit.

Honda has its sights beyond the uk anyway, on areas such as electric cars. The automaker is hoping more than two-thirds of its sales come from this category by 2030. It has tied up with Contempora­ry Amperex Technology Co., a large Chinese battery maker known as CATL, and committed $2.75 billion to General Motor Co.’s self-driving car unit GM Cruise Llc.

With the need for cash, and costs rising elsewhere, why dig your heels into a region with declining sales and a gloomy outlook? (Nomura analysts expect car sales in Europe to fall 2.9 percent this year.) The backdrop is partly due to new emissions lab tests for cars. Meanwhile, a switch from diesel has some carmakers adjusting their business models, anyway.

The reality is that Brexit’s impact will vary across auto manufactur­ers. Tata Motors Ltd., for instance, could see more than 70 percent of its profits wiped out in the next fiscal year if a hard Brexit deal yields a 10-percent tariff on cross-border auto trade, as most of Jaguar Land Rover’s production is based in the uk. The company has said a “bad Brexit deal” could cost it more than £1.2 billion ($1.55 billion) a year, but noted that no audit can be expected to predict the full range of consequenc­es.

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