Showing posts with label Honda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Honda. Show all posts

Monday, October 08, 2012

The death of the global auto industry

B&E’s Karan Mehrishi dives deep into the auto quagmire and gasps for breath...

This August 2008 couldn’t have been more ironic. Here I was supposed to file in the most devastating report I have ever made on the global auto industry, and there I had Audi’s offices requesting me to help them understand how Audi compares with other international auto players and the challenges Audi faces. Ironic because my research on America’s ‘greatest’ companies was complete, and the list of American idols – that is, the biggest five loss making companies America had created in the last year – was staring me on the face! These five stalwarts had a combined loss above $80 billion in the year 2007. What stunned me was that the leader of this bunch was clearly General Motors, with an individual loss touching close to a sickening $39 billion!!! Well, when I’d met Rick Wagoner, Chairman, GM, last year to get his exclusive quotes with respect to his $750 million investment in India, I had had no inkling of the times to come, and he’d also been quite confident that “GM wanted to leverage its global resources” to succeed in “such a high growth market.”

Strangely, nobody’s been picking up my phones in GM’s Detroit office since then. But Fritz Henderson, GM President and COO, Detroit, on August 20, 2008, writes in a rare letter to the editor in Wall Street Journal, “In the editorial ‘Can America’s Auto Makers Survive?’, Paul Ingrassia asks whether Detroit’s auto makers can survive. In the case of General Motors, the answer is, emphatically, yes. And not only survive, but thrive... At GM, we’re taking the difficult and necessary steps to reduce our cost structure to be more competitive and build a stronger foundation for our future.” I was stumped. It wasn’t that I was going to analyse the close to $2 billion loss GM suffered in 2005. The fact is that the last six months of GM (January to June 2008) has seen it rake up losses close to another $19 billion. In the last three months (April to June 2008), GM had losses of $15.5 billion! I really couldn’t see where the improvement, that GM President Henderson was referring to, was.

But it’s not as if GM’s alone in the bloodbath. Ford is not too far behind when it comes to sharing in the scathing hits. When William Clay Ford Jr. gave an interview to Planman Media a couple of years back, he had just entered India and was typically gung-ho about cutting it clean very soon. In the first week of August 2008, Ford reported the biggest and worst one quarter loss (April to June 2008) in the history of the corporation! $8.7 billion! Year 2007 loss: $2.7 billion! Year 2006 loss: $12.6 billion!

Not surprisingly, while annual sales have regularly fallen or remained stagnant at GM (2006: $205 billion sales; 2007: $181 billion; 2008 six months: $80.6 billion) and Ford (2006: $160 billion; 2007: $172 billion; 2008 six months: $85 billion), the sales at Toyota (2006: $179 billion; 2007: $202 billion; 2008 six months: $118 billion) and Honda (2006: $84 billion; 2007: $94 billion; 2008 six months: $54 billion) have been constantly rising. But more importantly, companies like Toyota and Honda have raked up humungous profits year after year! Toyota had profits of $11.6 billion, $14 billion and $6.18 billion in 2006, 2007 and the first six months of 2008. While Honda, during the same periods, had profits of $5 billion, $5 billion and close to $2 billion!

Compared to the accumulated profits of $44 billion in the last three years of the fuel-efficient focused Japanese Big 2, the Detroit Big 2 had accumulated losses of a mind numbing $82 billion!!! What gives?!?! That’s when I came across four extremely critical issues that could surely define the reasons why the global auto industry dies sooner than later...

The no-brainer auto issue #1

Understanding the first is unbelievably simple! Fuel-efficient cars [in other words, cars that run on traditional petroleum and give increasing miles per gallon]! The reality is that companies that have focused less on providing high level quality (in terms of say, styling, driving, luxury, SUV experience) and more on providing flat fuel efficiency have succeeded beyond anybody’s expectations. The corollary is that companies that have focused on the opposite have tasted devastating billion dollar losses. It’s obvious that the solution was not something hidden away in strategic thingamajigs. And to say all this as an afterthought is, like I wrote above, a no-brainer. But in truth, the concept that fuel efficient cars are the future, was for every auto major across the world to see. Sadly, the only ones that focused on it with passion were the Japanese giants.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2012.

For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.

 
IIPM : The B-School with a Human Face

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Stratagem-HONDA INDIA: SAGGING SALES

Failure to Refresh its Offerings has Cost Honda dear, which has Lost Sales and its Leadership Position in The Executive and Premium Cars. 

Above all, it’s the rising demand for diesel cars and the new product offerings in the mid-size sedan segment that has caught Honda unawares. Even the Johnnie-come-lately Volkswagen’s Vento has outsold Honda City, selling 3,994 units as against City’s 2,773 units at the end of March 2011. What’s worse, the beleagured Japanese automaker has no back-up plan to make up for the loss of volumes on account of the tremblor disaster. In a scenario where 65% of the total cars sold in the mid-size sedan segment are powered by a diesel engine, Honda paid the price of completely ignoring the diesel engine car market and then waking up too late by when competitors had already charged ahead. As such Honda is still two years away from developing a diesel engine for its cars in the Indian market. “Keeping in mind the price differential between petrol & diesel, it is expected that the demand for diesel cars will go up even further,” says Kapil Arora, Partner (Automotive), Ernst & Young. Going by market estimates, close to 40-50% of the total sales of products like Vento and SX4 come from the diesel variants. The sudden dieselisation of the Indian sedan market has only added to the woes of the Japanese auto major. “The rise in demand for diesel cars is because of the gap in the price of petrol & diesel. As diesel is comparatively cheaper and gives better mileage, consumers are preferring diesel cars in the light of the rising petrol prices,” says Jnaneswar Sen, VP – Marketing, Honda SIEL. He adds that Honda will take another two years to come up with a diesel engine for the Indian market. The question is: Will Honda be too late to in waking up to the call by 2013?

Going by the market standing at the end of FY 2010-11, Honda SIEL has a 2.36% share in the Indian passenger car market, as compared to the 14.26% share of Hyundai Motor India. The latter entered India in 1996 (almost a year after Honda’s entry into India). Even players like Ford, General Motors and Toyota have inched ahead of Honda even though they started their Indian journey around the same time. For the record, GM today has a market share of 4.25% while Ford is the sixth-largest player with a 3.91% market share. Taking into account the success of products like Figo, Beat and Spark, Honda seems to have ceded the space in the hatchback segment to its rivals. But for the earthquake, the launch of Honda’s Brio, which is expected to debut in the high-volume fetching sub Rs.5 lakh segment, has just got a little longer. The product was expected to be running on Indian roads by August 2011, but now it will be launched during the last quarter of this year. “Apart from the metros, we see huge growth potential in Tier-II & Tier-III cities for this car and therefore we have been expanding our sales network to reach out to newer cities and markets in the last 2 years. The potential to increase sales from the rest of the country is huge,” says Sen.

In the meantime, Honda will have to ramp up its marketing efforts to make up for the lost volumes due to the production cuts. As the Brio will make its debut during the festive season, Honda will be pinning a lot of hopes to pull off high volumes. Considering that Honda will not make its presence felt in the diesel segment until 2013, Brio will be the only hope for the company to make it count in the highly-competitive Indian market. One hopes that Honda’s extensive research on the Indian hatchback market and the lessons it learnt from the Jazz episode will help the Japanese carmaker to get it right this time around with the Brio.

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