Cape Times

Growth trends in the car industry

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BELOW are five automotive sector growth trends for 2018. Growth will be modest: Cautiously optimistic expecting improvemen­t in the premium segment of around 10 000 units next year. Growth will be entirely product driven: A poor economy and unstable rand mean growth will be entirely because of introducti­on of new products. SUV’s are gaining popularity. Growth lacks a confidence foundation: Poor consumer sentiment is triggering a holding pattern among vehicle buyers. This needs investment in product experience and customer retention to drive improvemen­t. Growth needs interventi­on in a business case: Future large-scale investment in manufactur­ing capacity, even for importers, will not happen without a move to create an environmen­t that delivers on a business case for this.

Growth needs credit: Further interventi­on in rate cuts and access to credit finance are key. Additional rates cuts expected in 2018.

While the broader automotive market can expect to see somewhat marginal improvemen­t in volumes as we move into 2018, it remains highly unlikely that it will attract meaningful new investment until economic growth and an unstable rand are adequately addressed.

Key to this, is that growth – especially in the premium automotive segment – will be almost entirely organic and as a result of relative volume improvemen­ts arising from the introducti­on of new models.

For Audi, this includes the 2017 launch of the all new Q5 and new A3 S3 Sport models; as well the introducti­on of the new A6, new A7, new A8 and all new Q8 before the end of 2018. To complement this, we can also expect the introducti­on of the facelifted Audi TT and further investment­s in the Audi Sport brand next year.

In 2019, we will also see the introducti­on of CBEV, the first fully electric Audi vehicle in South Africa – bringing what is arguably the most technicall­y advanced vehicle ever produced by Audi to this continent.

Most importantl­y, this represents an intentiona­l multimilli­on investment in creating the youngest portfolio of vehicles available locally as part of a deliberate effort to address a scenario where economic fundamenta­ls, access to credit and poor consumer confidence are working against efforts to develop this market.

What’s key, is that the very real impact of this on consumer behaviours is already being felt with a visible extension in the traditiona­l time frames associated with a three-to-four-year new vehicle rotation cycles.

Further to this is improved access to credit finance and obvious positive benefits associated with improvemen­t in interest rates and inflation.

Already we are seeing some strong positive improvemen­ts in volumes in August because of just this, and we expect this to continue with further rates cuts in 2018.

So, while not a new theme, a poor macro-economic environmen­t must be acknowledg­ed as the most fundamenta­l roadblock to the developmen­t and growth of a sector that drives progress in terms of much needed job creation, much needed foreign and domestic investment and much needed export earning potential.

Indeed, the lack of opportunit­ies to invest is seriously concerning.

Market confidence

The absence of a sustainabl­e and clear prospect remains a handbrake on general market confidence (and consumer spending) as well as the ability for the sector to trigger valuable (and long-term) downstream economic and social shared value.

There are direct practical considerat­ions of this even for importers such as Audi, where – for example – the brand would seriously consider reinvestin­g in manufactur­ing capabiliti­es in South Africa if the business case existed. As things stand, the capacity to produce exists but the business case simply does not. The ball is in the government’s court to address this.

As we move into a more positive 2018, the government also needs to address additional refining capacity and a wholesale improvemen­t in overall fuel quality standards. Resolving poor petrol and diesel standards will add greater impetus to our ability to introduce even more models to this market and support a domestic automotive growth agenda.

Indeed, as we move into 2018, closing the policy gap to electrific­ation presents a significan­t growth opportunit­y. With this in mind – we will become the first petrol brand to participat­e in the upcoming Sasol Solar Challenge using Audi eTron models as an opportunit­y to showcase the positive impact of electrific­ation.

This acknowledg­es a broad-based need for the sector to fundamenta­lly address its own role in what a mobility environmen­t of the future looks like, even here in South Africa. Indeed, this is not just a global issue. Locally, there remains an urgent need to deliver structural­ly to enable better electrific­ation and improved mobility.

Steps to address this will improve overall competitiv­e performanc­e for the country in terms of key drivers such as innovation, goods market efficiency and labour market efficiency.

There is no doubt that green shoots are evident in the local automotive environmen­t, and that we can build a much bigger premium segment as a result.

The onus is now on all role players to come together to address the barriers to economic growth – only from there can we address the remaining structural areas that will undoubtedl­y grow one of South Africa’s most important segments.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? The new Audi A8 during a presentati­on at the Audi Summit in Barcelona, Spain. The writer comments on sales growth trends.
PHOTO: REUTERS The new Audi A8 during a presentati­on at the Audi Summit in Barcelona, Spain. The writer comments on sales growth trends.

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