Exclusive: One Ford, two systems - U.S. carmaker revamps
China strategy amid EV push
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[October 03, 2017]
By Norihiko Shirouzu and Joseph White
BEIJING/DETROIT (Reuters) - U.S. automaker
Ford Motor Co is overhauling its China plans as its global "One Ford"
strategy is holding it back in the world's biggest auto market, two
high-ranking company insiders told Reuters.
The review of its China operations, part of a broader strategy re-think
under new CEO Jim Hackett, will likely see Ford focus on electric
commercial vans, which China is encouraging in its polluted and
congested city centers, as well as electric cars.
A shift to e-vans and e-trucks in China would also fit with Ford's
reckoning that a best play globally for electrification and autonomous
driving might be in commercial and delivery vehicles - a part of the
market where it is already strong in the United States and Europe.
The "One Ford" strategy - which helped the automaker's turnaround under
former CEO Alan Mulally - doesn't fit all situations, the two insiders
said, particularly in China and India, two crucial markets where Ford's
sales have slowed.
"That's why nobody internally talks about "One Ford" (in those markets)
anymore," said one of the insiders, who are familiar with Ford's Chinese
strategy. Neither wanted to be named as they are not authorized to speak
with reporters.
In a sign that Ford is turning away from what is essentially a global
push of its Ford and Lincoln brands, the Dearborn, Michigan automaker
wants to drive its truck-making China partner Jiangling Motors Corp (JMC)
more toward electric commercial vans.
Such a move is "potentially lucrative" as China's big cities effectively
ban gas and diesel trucks and vans, and "none of the foreign automakers
has made any major investment or strategic move in this emerging
electric commercial vehicle segment," said Yale Zhang, head of
Shanghai-based consultancy Automotive Foresight.
Sherif Marakby, Ford's vice president of autonomous vehicles and
electrification, told Reuters he couldn't comment on specific
partnerships that haven't been announced. "But we are absolutely open to
(EV) partnerships in different markets, and we continue to talk to other
companies and Tier One suppliers. Don't be surprised to see more
partnerships in electric vehicles in different markets," he said.
In India, Ford and local automaker Mahindra and Mahindra said last month
they will launch a strategic alliance in a market shifting to vehicle
electrification.
CHINA-SPECIFIC
In August, Ford said it was considering a joint venture with Anhui Zotye
Automobile Co to build electric vehicles in China under a new brand,
tapping Zotye's low-cost electric-vehicle (EV) technology. One of the
insiders said Ford was seeking Chinese regulatory approval for this.
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The logo of Ford Motor Company is on display at a dealership of
Genser company in Moscow, Russia, February 14, 2017. REUTERS/Maxim
Shemetov/File Photo
It has also brought in Jason Luo, a Chinese-born American, from
U.S.-based air bag maker Key Safety Systems to run its China operations.
He has been tasked, one of the insiders said, with building closer ties
with local partners including JMC and Changan Automobile Co, working
more effectively with regulators, and responding faster to changing
consumer tastes.
"One big issue at Ford China is our decision-making process is too slow," one of
the knowledgeable insiders said. "We try to manage everything, all aspects of
the business under "One Ford"," and that hobbled the company's ability to move
quickly, costing market share.
Ford's China sales are forecast to decline 4.6 percent this year, according to
LMC Automotive, a far cry from double-digit growth just five years ago.
SLOW LANE
Ford has no affordable electric plug-in cars for the Chinese market, despite it
being little secret that Beijing planned new quotas for all-electric battery
cars and heavily electrified plug-in hybrid vehicles. Those quotas were
announced late last month.
Nor does Ford have a high-volume brand of affordable entry cars for China - such
as the Baojun cars sold by rival General Motors Co and its China partner SAIC
Motor Corp. Launched in 2010, Baojun sold more than 2 million vehicles last
year.
With JMC, its nearly one-third-owned venture with JMC Group, Ford was slow to
expand the light commercial vehicle maker into low-cost entry passenger cars - a
market that has now become saturated with Chinese-branded cars and
foreign-operated China-only brands like Baojun and Nissan Motor Co's Venucia.
Ford's missteps in China were partly through a rigid adherence to the "One Ford"
mantra and a lack of local knowledge, one of the insiders said, noting company
executives sent into China often lacked the cultural ties to work with Chinese
regulators, policymakers and partners.
Also, China's market, consumer tastes and government policies shift rapidly, the
person said.
"Ford is having difficulty keeping up with 'China speed'. Everything here moves
so fast."
(Reporting by Norihiko Shirouzu and Joseph White, with additional reporting by
Paul Lienert; Editing by Ian Geoghegan)
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