Business Day

Volkswagen determined to defend China position

• Holding on to top spot in huge market is looking ever more challengin­g for carmaker

- Stefan Nicola and Monica Raymunt

On April 11 1983 in Shanghai, Volkswagen (VW) and its local partner assembled their first car in China, a boxy sedan called the Santana. The model proved wildly popular, becoming a symbol of China’s rising middle class and cementing VW’s role as the country’s most prominent carmaker.

While Santana sales have since tapered off, it is hard to overstate how important China still is for the VW group. The manufactur­er delivered roughly 40% of its vehicles to the world’s biggest car market in the first quarter. It employs more than 90,000 people in the country and operates more than 40 vehicle and components factories along with partners.

CEO Herbert Diess called China the company’s “second home market” this week, telling workers VW’s business there generates more than €4bn in profit every year.

“A large part of our bonus is created in China,” Diess said in a speech to staff in Wolfsburg, Germany. “We are doing everything to defend our position there as market leader.”

Keeping that top spot looks increasing­ly challengin­g. Volkswagen’s sales in China have fallen from a peak of 4.2-million cars in 2018 to 3.3-million last year. Its premium brands, such as Porsche and Audi still do fine, but the VW marque has been giving up market share.

Local manufactur­ers including Li Auto, Nio and Xpeng are catching up fast, and they are allin on battery-powered cars. When Bloomberg editor-inchief John Micklethwa­it asked Elon Musk about Tesla’s rivalry with Volkswagen last week, the CEO instead pointed to increasing­ly competitiv­e Chinese electric vehicle (EV) makers.

The top domestic rival looks to be BYD, the Shenzen-based manufactur­er backed by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway. It is on the cusp of entering the trillion-yuan market cap club after handling lockdowns, chip shortages and price increases better than many of its peers.

BYD may supply batteries to Tesla and is becoming more directly involved in lithium mining as it hopes to gain a longterm advantage in securing the key battery resource. BYD sold more than 320,000 EVs last year, while VW sold around 70,000 of its ID family of electric cars in China, well short of its internal target.

VW is changing tack in the US to gain market share, mainly by focusing on cars made in the US catered to local buyers instead of shipping Europeande­signed models. It will have to do more of that as well in China, where some buyers put more emphasis on connectivi­ty and entertainm­ent than pure driving performanc­e.

“Who of you here would spend €200 on a karaoke function?” Diess asked his workers on Tuesday. “For many Chinese, it’s standard so we must deliver on that.”

VW is setting up a regional China board to make better and faster decisions for its brands. Diess is dispatchin­g Ralf Brandence staetter, the head of the VW passenger car brand, to oversee the board, while former Huawei adviser Marcus Hafkemeyer will lead technology and VW Russia executive Stefan Mecha will head up sales.

One more issue will not easily be solved with personnel changes. In return for allowing VW to expand its Shanghai factory, the Chinese government asked the carmaker to also set up shop in Xinjiang to bolster economic developmen­t in the northern province.

VW faces mounting pressure over allegation­s that ethnic Uyghurs are suffering from coercive labour practices in the region. Two board members have recently voiced concerns. VW’s local partner in charge of its Xinjiang factory, SAIC, has said no workers are mistreated. Diess’s view is that VW’s presin the region can be a force for good.

But the carmaker is now facing pushback from the German government. Berlin recently declined a VW request to renew risk insurance for its Chinese operations, over human rights concerns, according to a person familiar with the matter. The rejection reflects a shift in tone on China, which has become Germany’s biggest trading partner outside the EU over the past two decades.

Diess is under pressure to tackle the issue himself. On Tuesday, he vowed to visit the Xinjiang plant as soon as Covid19 conditions allow. Just do not expect VW to scale back its ambitions in the country.

“We’ll continue to invest heavily in China,” Diess said. “We’ll keep benefiting from its knowhow and speed.”

WHO OF YOU WOULD SPEND €200 ON A KARAOKE FUNCTION? FOR MANY CHINESE, IT’S STANDARD

 ?? /Bloomberg/File ?? Second home: Visitors look at a Volkswagen Tiguan X sport utility vehicle at the carmaker’s booth at the Auto Shanghai 2021 show in Shanghai, China. The company has more than 40 vehicle and components factories in the country.
/Bloomberg/File Second home: Visitors look at a Volkswagen Tiguan X sport utility vehicle at the carmaker’s booth at the Auto Shanghai 2021 show in Shanghai, China. The company has more than 40 vehicle and components factories in the country.

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