Electric cars cast growing shadow on profits
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[October 01, 2018]
By Laurence Frost
PARIS (Reuters) - Electric cars are poised to arrive en masse in
European showrooms after years of hyped concept-car launches and
billions in investment by automakers and suppliers.
Now comes the hard part: selling them at a profit.
Battery models making their car-show debut in Paris this week, from PSA
Group's <PEUP.PA> electric DS3 Crossback to the Mercedes <DAIGn.DE> EQC,
will erode profitability as they struggle to stay in the black,
executives generally acknowledge.
But concerns are mounting that the impact could be worse, as consumers
resist paying more for electrified vehicles - forcing carmakers to sell
them at a bigger loss to meet emissions goals.
"What everyone needs to realize is that clean mobility is like organic
food – it's more expensive," said Carlos Tavares, chief executive of
Peugeot, Citroen and Opel manufacturer PSA.
A Sept. 25 profit warning by BMW <BMWG.DE>, blamed in part on
electrification costs and tightening emissions rules, was "a first alarm
signal", Tavares said in a weekend radio interview.
"Either we accept paying more for clean mobility, or we put the European
auto industry in jeopardy."
Underlining the turbulence facing automakers, British Prime Minister
Theresa May will confront Conservative rebels demanding a harder Brexit
stance at her party's annual conference, just as the Paris show gets
underway on Tuesday.
On its second day, the European Parliament votes on plans to cut carbon
dioxide car emissions by as much as 45 percent by 2030 from an average
95 grammes per kilometer in 2021 - a goal many automakers are already in
danger of missing, on pain of fines running to hundreds of millions of
euros.
PRICED TO PUSH
After declining for a decade, new-vehicle carbon emissions are rising
again as customers flock from cars to SUVs, and from diesel to gasoline
engines. Diesels emit more nitrogen oxides and particulates, but less
CO2.
Early signs suggest electric-car prices may fall sooner and faster than
production costs, as carmakers adjust for stalled emissions progress and
weak consumer appetite. That promises more red ink, as discounted
battery car sales finally take off.
Volkswagen <VOWG_p.DE> has said the ID hatchback, due to open the
brand's electric onslaught next year, will be priced close to
conventionally powered versions of the Golf compact.
"VW is about to launch a load of electric vehicles at the same price as
gasolines, and therefore at a loss," said Laurent Petizon, a managing
director at consulting firm AlixPartners.
"Our interpretation is that the 2021 fines have already been factored
into their sales strategy," he said. "Rather than pay penalties they
prefer to lose money on vehicles and get the market going."
Volkswagen declined to discuss pricing in detail. "We want our electric
cars to be a real alternative to a reasonably equipped Golf Diesel," a
spokesman said.
Volkswagen and Mercedes parent Daimler, which between them have
announced 30 billion euros ($35 billion) in electrification investment,
both warned last month that it would not be enough.
They and other carmakers are also mandated to sell more electric cars in
China and a group of U.S. states led by California. More than 200
electric and plug-in model launches are already scheduled globally over
the next three years.
COST GAP
Electric cars still cost 7,800 euros more to produce on average than
conventional ones, AlixPartners calculates. Plug-in hybrids - which
combine a smaller rechargeable battery with a combustion engine -
overshoot by 5,000 euros.
When that cost gap is reflected in the price, few are sold.
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The EQC, the first fully
electric Mercedes car is shown at a presentation in Stockholm,
Sweden September 4, 2018. REUTERS/Esha Vaish/File Photo
Mass-market electrics such as the Renault <RENA.PA> Zoe and Nissan <7201.T> Leaf
have been on sale for most of the current decade, and heavily subsidized in
Europe, while Tesla <TSLA.O> has made inroads into the premium business. Yet
pure-electric cars claim just 1 percent of the market overall.
Despite their higher cost, BMW plug-in models are already priced broadly on a
par with diesels. The luxury carmaker acknowledges that their margins are
significantly thinner.
Mercedes also says the EQC electric SUV will be priced close to its GLC cousin
to tackle Tesla's $49,000 Model 3.
"It absolutely is impacting the profitability of the industry," said Rebecca
Lindland, a senior analyst at Kelley Blue Book, which tracks vehicle pricing.
"Demand doesn't justify investment at all - it's all regulation."
Which is why, on this subject more than most, European carmakers talk from both
sides of their mouths. While executives exude confidence for investors' and
customers' benefit, their Brussels lobby group ACEA warns of an imminent threat
to the region's 3.4 million automotive manufacturing jobs.
"The conditions for such a systemic change clearly aren't met, and consumers
just aren't ready for full-electric," ACEA Secretary General Erik Jonnaert said
recently.
SCALE EFFECTS
Carmakers are demanding increased public investment in recharging networks -
which may yet awaken mass demand.
Economies of scale should also bring some relief. But lithium-ion batteries,
which claim 40 percent of an electric car's value, face global cobalt and nickel
shortages that will pull the other way, inflating costs as production volumes
rise.
Perhaps more critically, generous government sales subsidies are unlikely to
survive much growth. In markets where incentives have been dropped, electric car
sales have fallen.
Renault is discounting its recently upgraded Zoe in the UK market with a 5,000
pound ($6,500) trade-in bonus, in addition to the government's 4,500 pound
plug-in incentive.
French rival PSA will price its new rechargeable hybrids to match diesel leasing
rates, program director Olivier Salvat told reporters on a recent factory visit
- adding that the carmaker aimed to avoid losing money on each vehicle sold.
"We don't launch vehicles with negative operating margins," Salvat said.
German luxury carmakers including Volkswagen Group, which includes Audi and
Porsche, could put up with losses on electrified vehicles if it enables them to
keep selling their biggest earners, upscale SUVs and large sedans.
That would leave mid-market competitors such as PSA and Renault, which can ill
afford to sell large volumes of electric cars below cost, in a tougher bind.
"In electromobility you have to be a cost leader," BMW research and development
chief Klaus Froehlich told Reuters.
"If you are not a cost leader you will not survive."
($1 = 0.7675 pounds)
Shortfall of planned European battery supply for electric vehicles (EV) https://tmsnrt.rs/2JnDSOX
Global electric-battery vehicle sales. https://tmsnrt.rs/2oDPjG4
(Reporting by Laurence Frost; Additional reporting by Esha Vaish in Stockholm,
Gilles Guillaume and Joe White in Paris, Edward Taylor in Frankfurt; Editing by
Mark Potter)
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