Here’s why. The strategy is a game changer with global impact.
Geely, China’s largest domestic automaker, disclosed
that deliveries plunged 29% in June compared to a year ago, and that they’re
down 15% in the first half. And it slashed by another 10% its already lowered
forecast for deliveries for the whole year. This type of disclosure is now a
regular feature of China’s dramatic auto slowdown.
New-vehicle sales in China dropped 9.4% in June, compared to a year ago,
to 2.06 million vehicles, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers
(CAAM). It was the 12th month in a row of year-over-year declines. For the
first half of 2019, sales were down 12%. If sales continue to decline at this
rate, they will drop to 21 million vehicles for the whole year, the lowest
since 2014, representing a 15% drop from the peak in 2017 (estimate for 2019
in red):
But the boom had been mind-boggling: From 2005 through 2017, sales
sextupled, from 4.0 million vehicles to 24.7 million vehicles. In China’s
managed, pump-primed, growth-no-matter-what economy – at least that is what
it was – there was not a single year of declines in the data going back to
1991. But that changed in 2018 with a 4.1% decline. And now there is this
awful 2019.
During the Financial Crisis years 2009 and 2010, China’s vehicle sales doubled,
from 6.8 million in 2008 to 13.8 million in 2010, with annual sales soaring
52.8% in 2009 and 33.2% in 2010, after the government unleashed a torrent of
liquidity and incentives to get consumers to buy cars. But 2017 was already a
year of near-stagnation (+1.4%), now followed by what will likely be two
years of declines in a row:
But “New Energy Vehicles” are booming.
Despite falling overall new-vehicle sales, New Energy Vehicles (NEV) are
hot and sales are booming. They include battery-electric vehicles (BEV),
plugin hybrids, and fuel-cell vehicles.
In June, NEV sales skyrocketed 80% year-over-year to about 152,000. Of
them, 129,000 were BEVs, 22,000 were plug-in hybrids, and a minuscule 484
vehicles were powered by a fuel cell.
In June, BEVs accounted for 6.3% of total new vehicle sales, up from 0%
just a few years ago, putting BEVs on track to hit 1 million in sales for the
year. Starting to be real numbers!
Where’s the government stimulus everyone is waiting for?
In China, the government runs the show. So if sales fall across an
industry the size of China’s auto industry, by far the largest in the world,
everyone looks to the government to do something, and come up with some
big-fat stimulus package that will put sales back on track, as it had done so
miraculously during the Financial Crisis. Everything revolves around
incentives. And consumers are well-trained by now to play the game.
Many industry voices, including the China Association of Automobile
Manufacturers, have exhorted the government to come up with incentives.
And those well-trained consumers waiting for incentives have been
disappointed. There are no new incentives on cars with internal combustion
engines (ICE). The government has not relaxed the limits on the issuance of
license plates for ICE vehicles. And car buyers have to grapple with new
emissions standards that 15 cities and provinces – accounting for 60% of
new-vehicle sales in China – are implementing ahead of the government-imposed
deadline in 2020.
While the government is spurning incentives for ICE vehicles, it is
heaping incentives on New Energy Vehicles. Yang Jian, managing editor of Automotive News
China, explains that this is the government strategy going forward, and
the industry needs to come to grips with it:
The days are gone when China’s leaders pursue economic growth at any cost.
When it comes to describing economic policies, the catchphrase used by
government officials these days is “switching from old to new economic
drivers.”
Under the new approach, traditional gasoline-powered vehicles, in general,
are deemed an “old” economic driver that results in air pollution. While they
support economic growth, they need to be improved to reduce emissions, the
thinking goes. That’s why the central government is pushing China’s cities
and provinces to upgrade vehicle emissions standards, ahead of schedule,
regardless of the cost to carmakers and dealers.
By contrast, the electrified vehicle sector is seen as a “new” economic
driver capable of boosting economic growth without inflicting damage on the
country’s environment. Electrified vehicles have won key support from the top
echelon of the Chinese government.
The incentives for NEVs, that were adopted in 2016 for a five-year period
to encourage innovation and build the industry, are going to be phased out at
the end of 2020. These incentives are under a carbon-credit program with
quotas for electrified vehicle sales. To get the carbon credits, an automaker
has to reach NEV sales equal to 10% of its annual sales in 2019, and 12% in
2020, after which the credits were supposed to end.
Now there are fears that sales of NEVs will plunge after 2020. So this
week, the government proposed a new carbon-credit quota program for 2021,
2022, and 2023, with sales targets for NEVs of 14%, 16%, and 18%
respectively, along with other changes.
“The proposed changes to the carbon credit program, once implemented, will
force automakers to keep ramping up electrified vehicle output beyond 2020,”
says Yang Jian.
And the government is unlikely to come to the rescue of overall auto sales
“with a heavy dose of incentives,” Yang Jian says, “as long as it can
continue to prop up electrified vehicle sales.”
In other words, this is not the era of the Financial Crisis, where the
guiding principle was growth-at-all-cost; instead the government will likely
let the overall market slow down as long as NEV sales boom. This fits into
China’s long-term strategic decision to become the dominant global leader in
NEVs and auto-battery systems. And ICE vehicles are left to fend for
themselves.
Shadow banks provided 40% of new loans for vehicle purchases in India.
Read… Vehicle
Sales Plunge amid India’s Shadow-Bank Debt Crisis & Contagion Fears
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