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Germany risks falling back into recession as car industry sputters

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Germany risks falling back into recession as car industry sputters​


By Olesya Dmitracova, CNN
Published 6:58 AM EDT, Mon August 7, 2023



Germany's industrial production tumbled in June, in large part due to a drop in automotive output.

Germany's industrial production tumbled in June, in large part due to a drop in automotive output.

Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg/Getty Images
LondonCNN —
Industrial production in Europe’s biggest economy fell 1.5% in June compared with May, driven by a 3.5% drop in Germany’s vast automotive sector.
The decline in German industrial output, much steeper than forecast by economists, raises the risk that the manufacturing heavyweight will contract again later this year, potentially falling back into recession.

The construction sector, where output shrank by 2.8%, also had a negative impact on overall industrial production, the country’s statistics office said Monday.

Germany only just emerged from a recession in the April-to-June period as gross domestic product (GDP) was flat compared with the previous quarter, but the latest provisional data suggests the slight improvement in the economy’s fortunes may not last.

“We expect a drop in industrial output to be one of the factors causing a renewed contraction in German GDP in the second half of this year,” Franziska Palmas, senior Europe economist at Capital Economics, wrote in a note.

Jörg Krämer, chief economist at Commerzbank, also predicted a fall in GDP later this year.

Auto woes

The German car industry, which accounts for around 5% of the economy, is struggling to recover from the blow dealt by the pandemic and snarled supply chains.

Some 2.2 million cars rolled off production lines in the first half of the year, according to the German Automotive Industry Association. Although that was a significant increase compared with the same period in 2022, production is still 10% lower than in the first half of 2019. Reaching the pre-pandemic level of output may take a while yet.

“In view of the overall economic situation and the development of incoming orders, it can be expected that the high [production] growth rates will soon slow down. The high order backlog is slowly being reduced,” Hildegard Müller, the president of the industry body, said in a statement last month.

In other parts of Germany’s industrial sector, which includes energy production, prospects appear brighter. New orders in manufacturing jumped 7% in June from the previous month, provisional data showed Friday, although the figures were distorted by large-scale orders.

“German industry remains in rough waters,” Salomon Fiedler, economist at Berenberg, said in a note Monday, noting last year’s energy price shock and weakness in US and Chinese demand, among other factors.

Volkswagen (VLKAF), Europe’s largest carmaker, has been grappling with sluggish sales in China — its single biggest market — losing out to local competitors.

The company reported a 14.5% drop in its deliveries in China in the first quarter. It saw a recovery in April and May but deliveries in the first half overall were still 1.2% down on the same period in 2022.

Germany’s broader industrial sector has had to contend with high energy prices, which were already rising in Europe when Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, sending them to record highs. European natural gas prices have since tumbled to stand 44% below their pre-war level.

Berenberg expects Germany to fall back into “a mild recession” in the second half of this year, Fiedler added.

 
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Electric cars: Chinese carmakers are outpacing German giants​

Klaus Ulrich
August 7 2023

High costs, decreasing demand, fiercer competition — the German automotive industry is coming under increasing pressure. And in the lucrative Chinese market, trouble is looming.


66433635_1004.webp


China's carmakers have every reason to smileImage: Hu Guolin/ChinaFotoPress/picture alliance

A sense of crisis is spreading in the German economy as order books look thinner and consumer purchasing power dwindles amid rising inflation.

The country's car manufacturers are also facing headwinds but theirs are magnified by rising structural problems in the once-powerful industry. The transition to electric mobility and autonomous driving is causing higher costs, while the necessary funds, still coming mostly from sales of combustion engine vehicles, are increasingly uncertain, not to mention politically undesirable.

Company figures for the first half of 2023 were satisfying for the likes of Volkswagen, Mercedes Benz, and BMW. All of them reported increased revenues and higher profits. But their outlooks for the resr of the year have disappointed the expectations of investors and shareholders. Inflation and rising interest rates are having a dampening effect, and new vehicles are in less demand.

"Even if we see an increase in production, this is not a sign of easing," warned Hildegard Müller, president of the German Association of the Automotive Industry, noting that sales were still more than a fifth below pre-pandemic levels in 2019.

Orders are declining in Germany, especially for battery-powered vehicles, with demand plunging to only about 60% of volumes from the previous year.

A Chinese project car displayed at the auto show in Shanghai, China, in 2023

A Chinese project car displayed at the auto show in Shanghai, China, in 2023


China's electric cars are no longer niche products at international auto showsImage: Ng Han Guan/AP/dpa/picture alliance

China's booming market​

China, the world's largest and most important automotive market, meanwhile is rapidly growing its sector for electric cars, extending its lead not only in new registrations but also in production. Currently, every second electric vehicle worldwide is driven in China.

Chinese manufacturers are also making rapid technological progress catching up fast with industry bellwether, Tesla. Chinese car buyers, from both the middle class as well as higher income brackets, are increasingly favoring domestic brands. China's biggest carmaker BYD sold 29% more purely electric cars than Tesla in the first half of this year, according to the latest figures from the China Passenger Car Association.

"A disruption is taking place in this market," Ralf Brandstätter, a board member of VW China, told reporters recently, as he was forced to admit that VW was outsold by BYD in the first quarter in China. BYD delivered almost twenty times more electric vehicles to customers in China than VW.

In order to catch the wave of China's rising automotive power, VW has announced a partnership with automaker Xpeng in the fields of electromobility, software and autonomous driving. The tie-up with the Chinese startup has a price tag of $700 million for VW and aims to bring two electric VW models to the Chinese market by 2026.

Staff members assemble new energy vehicles on the assembly line of BYD auto plant in Xi'an, northwest China's Shaanxi Province,

Staff members assemble new energy vehicles on the assembly line of BYD auto plant in Xi'an, northwest China's Shaanxi Province,


Chinese automaker BYD — abbreviation for Build Your Dreams — is the new market leader, outselling VW in 2022Image: Liu Xiao/Xinhua/picture alliance

Mass market rot spreads into luxury segment​

VW's high-end brands Porsche and Audi are also feeling mounting market pressure, as are Germany's two other luxury carmakers Mercedes-Benz and BMW.

Auto industry consulting firm Berylls claimed in a recent market study that the world is seeing a "change of guard in China" in the premium segment. In the competition with traditional luxury manufacturers from Germany, the Chinese are "overtaking on the fast lane," the study said.

For decades German carmakers dominated the Chinese market by using a trickle down strategy: They introduced technology they had developed as optional extras for consumers and continued selling it at a premium price, until their competitors caught up.

"How out of step this product strategy is with the expectations of present-day Chinese car buyers, German OEMs [original equipment manufacturers] are currently getting a first taste of – with alarming implications for the future," Willy Wang, managing director of Berylls China, wrote.

"As China has moved to the forefront of consumer innovation, Chinese customers have neither the patience for technologies to trickle down the line nor the willingness to pay extra for the latest features," Wang wrote.

In the past, German luxury vehicles were considered ideal status symbols for the rising middle and upper classes in China. Domestic brands were reputed to be technologically backward and of little convincing quality.

Digital features are the trump card​

But now Chinese produced vehicles are gaining popularity, especially due to digital features such as advanced assistance and infotainment systems. This isn't surprising given the traffic situation on China's crowded roads. In terms of things like comfort and quality, they are perceived by customers to be nearly the same or even slightly better than established carmakers, according to the study.

"The German auto industry will likely not play the same dominant role in China's car sector as it did in the past 20 years," says Gregor Sebastian, a China expert from the Merics Institute. For Chinese customers, technology is replacing traditional qualities as a reason to make a purchase, he told DW.


No German manufacturer in top 10​

Small wonder then that 80% of all battery-electric vehicles in China now come from domestic producers. Among the top ten sellers only Tesla ranks. German brands no longer play any role in the list.

Regarding the overall Chinese auto market, including vehicles with internal combustion engines, Chinese brands are set to outsell foreign brands this year for the first time, with a market share of 51%. This share is projected to rise to 65% by 2030, say management consultants, AlixPartners, in their Global Automotive Outlook report for 2023.

Car loading at the Bremerhaven port in Germany

Car loading at the Bremerhaven port in Germany


Auto export flows might soon reverse as China's electric cars catch on with EuropeImage: picture-alliance/dpa/J. Sarbach

China is the export champion​

Regarding Europe, the report predicts that car sales would remain about 15% below pre-pandemic levels. This was likely to be a long term prospect. European manufacturers would increasingly also be pressured by Chinese electric vehicle manufacturers in their home markets.

Unsurprisingly, in the first quarter of 2023, China replaced Japan as the world's automotive export champion. In 2020, it was still in sixth place. The Asian country is advancing as a sales market, as an exporter, and as a production location.

"China is on its way to becoming an automotive superpower," Fabian Piontek, AlixPartners' automotive expert, told DW. European manufacturers are increasingly finding themselves defending market share at home. "The era of record profits for German automakers is coming to an end," he concluded.

 
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Only German luxury brands sell only for elites
Where as common man still prefers japenese cars Toyota is no 1 in usa world biggest car market
 
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scrapping nuclear power plants is the most stupid move ever.

This stupidity and many others answer the question why wages, living standards in Swiss are twice than Germany.
 
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Japan still has the huge video game, anime manga industry to prop it up.
I wonder what Germany has left, biotech and vaccines?

Japan was much better than Germany.

Except for tank guns, Germany has technologies, that Japan also has.

But Japan has semiconductors, IC design, aerospace, network communications, underlying tools for gene editing, iPS induced reprogramming of stem cells, etc., which Germany does not have.
 
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Only German luxury brands sell only for elites
Where as common man still prefers japenese cars Toyota is no 1 in usa world biggest car market

Would love to get my hands on a mid/late-80s Toyota MR2
 
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The Porsche 911 Turbo S is my favorite rocket ship

Nice car
Nissan skyline GT-R of Japan is faster more reliable and depreciates better
My favourite dream come true car

Would love to get my hands on a mid/late-80s Toyota MR2

Nice car I had a few when in there prime
1995 targa top turbo being my favourite
So pretty second to only Rx7 looks wise
Loved my silvia Nissan as well
Pop up lights are so cool
 
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Germans have been fooled by Americans (again) into a war they don't need
 
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