Absent from America,
French cars drive into Iran election
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[May 16, 2017]
By Bozorgmehr Sharafedin, Laurence Frost and Edward Taylor
LONDON/PARIS/FRANKFURT
(Reuters) - French carmakers PSA and Renault are turning their U.S.
absence into an Iranian advantage by piling into a resurgent market
still off-limits to foreign rivals fearful of sanctions under Donald
Trump's administration.
The French investment has been seized upon by Iranian President Hassan
Rouhani, who is seeking re-election this week, as evidence that his
pursuit of a nuclear detente and attempts to attract foreign money will
pay off for the economy.
PSA - the maker of Peugeots and Citroens - and Renault have pushed hard
into Iran since its 2015 deal with world powers that saw international
sanctions lifted in return for curbs on Tehran's nuclear activities. PSA
has signed production deals worth 700 million euros ($768 million),
while Renault has announced a new plant investment to increase its
production capacity to 350,000 vehicles a year.
The French companies, unlike their German, American and Japanese
competitors, do not have manufacturing or sales operations in the United
States. This makes them less vulnerable to penalties for any violation
of U.S. sanctions still in force which ban financial transactions with
Iran.
The prospect of a hardened U.S. stance under President Trump - a
consistent critic of the nuclear deal - has deepened the caution of
carmakers with large American exposures.
Germany's Volkswagen <VOWG_p.DE> and BMW <BMWG.DE> are among those that
have put Iranian ambitions on hold, industry sources told Reuters.
"We're well aware of the market potential in Iran but we can't afford to
take any risks," said a source close to VW. The company declined to
comment on specific investment discussions.
PSA and Renault declined to comment on their Iranian operations in
detail. Earlier this year, PSA's Middle East chief Jean-Christophe
Quemard acknowledged that the renewed U.S. pressure under Trump was
helping his company stay ahead of foreign rivals who were holding back.
"This is our opportunity to accelerate," Quemard said. "We've opened up
a lead and we plan to hold on to it."
Early movers to establish Iranian operations could win big in a market
deprived for years of affordable state-of-the-art vehicles and where
sizeable import duties hand a major advantage to locally built cars.
Iranian car sales jumped 50 percent in the first quarter of 2017,
according to data provider IHS Automotive, with models from Peugeot,
Renault and Iran's SAIPA showing solid gains.
Tehran car salesman Mehdi Monfared, whose dealership mostly sells
domestic manufacturer Iran Khodro's namesake brand, said he had
witnessed an "explosion" in demand in recent months.
"People are being less careful with their money and are spending their
savings on cars," he told Reuters by telephone. "And the banks are
lending."
PRESIDENTIAL PEUGEOT
Rouhani pushed the French investment to the forefront of his election
campaign when he attended a ceremony this month to mark the production
launch of the Peugeot 2008, the first product of post-sanctions
manufacturing deals with foreign carmakers.
"When we signed the nuclear deal, critics said it was just a piece of
paper that would never be implemented," the president, whose main
challenger is a hardline cleric opposed to opening up Iranian markets,
said in an Instagram post picturing him behind the wheel of the mini-SUV
at the event in Tehran.
"But now we can see that auto industry sanctions have been lifted, joint
venture agreements concluded and a new car is being built."
PSA and Renault have moved swiftly to sign new production deals to
upgrade their pre-sanctions partnerships with Iran Khodro and SAIPA. PSA
plans to add more Peugeot and Citroen models in coming months, while
Renault has introduced its Sandero compact alongside the Tondar sedan.
By contrast VW, which had been considering a production tie-up with
Iran's Mammut Khodro, has put the talks on the backburner because of the
uncertainty, according to the source close to the group.
[to top of second column] |
Iran's President Hassan Rouhani checks a car during a ceremony
marking the beginning of production of new Iran Khodro products,
Dena+ and Peugeot 2008, in Tehran, Iran, May 2, 2017. Picture taken
May 2, 2017. President.ir/Handout via REUTERS
"Any company operating in Iran or planning to enter the market needs to
ask itself what could happen if there is a fundamental change of course
by the U.S.," the person said.
BMW has also studied production, import and distribution opportunities
in Iran but concluded that the time was not right, according to a source
familiar with the matter.
"Once we see General Motors and Ford set up shop our plans may be
revived, but not before," the person said.
A BMW spokesman said the company's future entry into Iran "will depend
on political and economic developments", adding: "There are currently no
concrete plans."
Daimler had announced undated plans for Iranian heavy truck
production before Trump's November election victory, but now plays them
down. "There is hardly any economic growth in Iran, so demand for
commercial vehicles is generally low," the company said.
U.S. carmakers withdrew before the 1979 Iranian revolution as ties
between the countries broke down. Japanese manufacturers such as Toyota
<7203.T> have not signaled any Iranian investment plans since the
nuclear deal.
PRODUCTION REBOUND
Nuclear-related sanctions were lifted after the 2015 agreement, but
Washington has maintained its own pre-existing ban on financial
transactions with Iran, making it harder for companies with a large U.S.
presence to do business with Tehran.
The Trump administration has also ordered a review of sanctions relief
granted under the nuclear deal, despite acknowledging Tehran's
compliance.
But the U.S. pressure has not halted a steady recovery in car production
in Iran, from 796,000 cars in 2013 to 1.23 million last year. IHS
expects output to keep climbing to 1.34 million cars this year and 1.49
million in 2018, nearing the 1.65 million peak recorded in 2011.
"Locally built vehicles are the bestsellers by some margin," said IHS
analyst Michel Jacinto, an Iran specialist.
South Korea's Hyundai is building its Accent compact, to be
followed by the i20 mini, as Chinese brands including Chery move to
defend the small but growing footholds they gained while sanctions kept
their European rivals out.
Affordability may be an issue for some new models. The Peugeot 2008 is
expected to be priced at around $24,000 when it arrives in showrooms -
more than three times the average annual urban household income in Iran.
Until such market realities are tested, however, the new products are
being greeted with optimism.
"The 2008 launch is the result of Rouhani's policy since the signing of
the nuclear deal, so it was symbolic," PSA's Quemard told Reuters last
week.
Project lead times of two years or more mean the 2008 is the
international agreement's first tangible result, Quemard said. "So it's
a good example - and it's being used as such."
(Additional reporting by Andreas Cremer in Berlin and Gilles Guillaume
in Paris; Writing by Laurence Frost; Editing by Pravin Char)
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