Sunday Times

Car sales tit-for-tat after Merc backs out

BMW now withholdin­g figures in retaliatio­n for rival’s policy

- DAVID FURLONGER

MERCEDES-Benz South Africa is under pressure to back down on its refusal to publish details of monthly sales of cars and commercial vehicles. Its stance has called into question the credibilit­y of South Africa’s vehicle sales data, used to gather insights into the state of the economy.

BMW South Africa has retaliated by withholdin­g details of its market performanc­e, and other companies have now threatened to follow suit.

MBSA has indicated it may change its policy if required to do so by the Department of Trade and Industry. Sources in the department say it wants the carmaker to fall in line with the industry, but there is no sign of imminent action.

Local manufactur­ers and importers are required to report sales of all vehicles each month. Most do so in detail. In each category — cars, light commercial vehicles, medium commercial­s, heavy commercial­s, extra-heavy commercial­s and buses — they show the numbers of each brand and model sold.

Some also reveal which market segments vehicles are sold to: rental fleets, government department­s or the public.

The informatio­n is meat and drink to economists. It shows consumer spending and affordabil­ity trends; credit trends; corporate and government confidence in business conditions; and the car-rental view of tourism demand.

In short, vehicle sales are a barometer of real and potential economic activity.

Since November 2014, however, MBSA has provided only two figures: an aggregate for car sales and another for commercial­s. It is the second time the company has taken this action. Its position is guided by German parent Daimler, which was fined à1-billion last year by the European Commission for colluding with European truckmaker­s between 1997 and 2011.

In 2011, following the issuing of European antitrust regulation­s, Daimler advised group subsidiari­es that the sharing of informatio­n among competiin tors could lead to collusion. It was at the end of that year that MBSA first withheld figures.

That decision was reversed a few months later, after the Department of Trade and Industry, which publishes the monthly sales, issued a directive to companies to share their figures. It made clear such sharing was not considered collusive here.

But then, after what is understood to have been a briefing with certain department officials in 2014, MBSA said it was no longer obliged to report CLOSER INSPECTION: Mercedes-Benz South Africa has not released detailed sales figures since 2014 full. This month, MBSA said in a statement that its nondisclos­ure attitude was still “in accordance with internal policies uniform to all our global operations.

“Due to the fact that the exchange of data by competitor­s is a sensitive issue, we will comply with our group-wide internal standard. We . . . would always comply with legislatio­n in the countries where we operate, so if there was legislatio­n that stipulated reporting in more detail, we would comply.”

Nico Vermeulen, director of the National Associatio­n of Automobile Manufactur­ers of South Africa, said the industry was anxious for the department to reissue its original directive, requiring MBSA to publish sales in full. A formal request is likely this month.

Of course, industry frustratio­n with MBSA is also about competitio­n. MBSA has full access to the market performanc­e of its competitor­s, while its own remains hidden.

Volkswagen South Africa MD Thomas Schaefer said: “It’s ridiculous that Merc doesn’t report but benefits from everyone else’s figures. It’s nonsense.”

Audi South Africa, part of the Volkswagen South Africa group, has considered limiting its own reporting. It might still act, Schaefer said. At least one other company said it was considerin­g similar action.

BMW South Africa said it would not share full results again until Mercedes did so. Spokesman Diederik Rietsma said: “We have always supported the reporting system, but it needs everyone on board to make it work.”

Nicholas Nkosi, head of personal markets at Standard Bank Vehicle and Asset Finance, said: “Every time a company fails to report fully, it dilutes the importance of the overall numbers. Any further withdrawal­s would dilute the validity of the figures and have consequenc­es for economic forecastin­g.”

The reporting system needs everyone on board

Comment on this: write to letters@businessti­mes.co.za or SMS us at 33971 www.sundaytime­s.co.za

 ?? Picture: KEVIN SUTHERLAND ??
Picture: KEVIN SUTHERLAND

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