How Ford burned $12 billion in Brazil
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[May 20, 2021] By
Marcelo Rochabrun
SAO PAULO (Reuters) - A century ago Henry
Ford came to Brazil and established the town of Fordlandia, hoping to
become an Amazonian rubber baron, but retreated deep in the red.
Now the automaker he founded is once again licking its Brazilian wounds,
having abandoned production in the challenging market after burning
through roughly 61 billion reais ($11.6 billion) in the past decade.
Ford Motor Co announced the closure of its manufacturing plants in
January, dealing a heavy blow to its more than 5,000 workers in the
country and almost 300 dealerships.
Previously unreported corporate filings show the scale of the financial
woes that led to the decision. Ford had burned through $7.8 billion, the
bulk in accumulated losses but also some cash injections, according to
the documents filed in Sao Paulo state, where the automaker is
registered in Brazil.
Add to that the $4.1 billion that Ford will shell out to extricate
itself from its commitments, and the price tag for the Brazilian
operation rises to almost $12 billion.
Almost all the losses and cash injections were in the past eight years,
when the company has lost about $2,000 for every car it sold, Reuters
calculations based on the filings and sales data indicate.
Ford, which does not separate out Brazil from South America in its
financial results, declined to comment on the losses, cash injections
and calculations.
The expensive retreat of the U.S. heavyweight underlines the risks for
global automakers in Brazil, a country seen not long ago as one of the
most promising growth markets in the world, but where tax, labor and
logistics costs are high.
The COVID-19 pandemic has strained finances while Ford's problems also
reflect, in part, a strategic misstep that saw it lag rivals in
transforming its lineup of unprofitable compact cars into higher-margin
SUVs, according to half a dozen sources familiar with the company's
Brazilian operation.
Ford had in fact drafted a plan to shift into SUVs, larger cars with
higher profit margins, but was too slow to implement it, they said.
"There were no other viable options," Lyle Watters, Ford's head for
South America, told Reuters in a statement about the decision to exit
the country.
Watters, who will start a new Ford role in China in July, cited an
"unfavorable economic environment, lower vehicle demand (and) higher
industry idle capacity" for the Brazil retreat.
He declined to comment on the SUV project, saying he would not
"speculate on new product plans."
A Ford spokesman in Brazil said the company was implementing "a lean and
asset-light business model in the region, with a truly customer-centric
mindset".
BRAZIL VS MEXICO
Brazil is largely a lossmaker for global car companies, despite the
government providing federal subsidies totaling $8 billion over the past
decade and a 35% import tariff to shield local production.
Domestic costs are high. Even though local factories can make 5 million
cars a year, more than double the number sold in the country, exports
are minimal because prices are uncompetitive. And it costs automakers
money to keep factories open while operating at low capacity.
Mexico, by contrast, exports more than 80% of the cars it makes, helped
by free-trade agreements with the United States and Canada, making it an
attractive alternative for the same carmakers that already operate in
Brazil.
A 2019 study by consultant PwC found that selling a Mexican-made car in
Brazil was 12% cheaper for an automaker than selling a locally-made
vehicle, including production, tax and logistics costs.
The study was commissioned by Brazilian auto industry group Anfavea,
which is lobbying the government to reduce taxes and labor costs.
The high Brazilian costs mean even carmakers who pivoted earlier than
Ford to higher-margin SUVs, like the Brazilian units of players like
Volkswagen AG, General Motors Co and Toyota Motors Corp, are struggling
to stay in the black.
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Workers protest outside a Ford Motor Co plant, after the company
announced it will close its three plants in the country, in Taubate,
Brazil, January 18, 2021. REUTERS/Roosevelt Cassio
Volkswagen Brazil has lost $3.7 billion since 2011, according to the corporate
filings in Sao Paulo state. GM Brazil has received $2.2 billion in cash
injections since 2016, and Toyota Brazil last year required forgiveness on $1
billion of inter-company debt, the documents showed.
Volkswagen, GM and Toyota all declined to comment on the filings figures.
The Brazilian economy ministry did not respond to a request for comment about
the Ford exit and problems faced by the auto sector.
PROSPECTS PLUMMET
Ford failed to develop a viable production business in Brazil despite a practice
of pursuing tax subsidies, which totaled more than that of its rivals over the
past decade.
Since 2011, Ford has reaped about $2.6 billion in tax subsidies, or a third of
all federal automotive incentives distributed in that period, according to
Reuters calculations based on official tax forfeiture figures.
Ford declined to comment on its tax benefits.
In 2013, however, the business outlook began to change, as commodities prices
crashed and dragged the local currency with it, sending Brazil into a deep
recession made worse by corruption scandals. At the time, it was the world's
fourth largest auto market. It now ranks seventh.
Weak domestic demand and the uncompetitive exports pushed Ford to quintuple its
bulk fleet sales between 2011 and 2019, and deepen the discounts to 30% or more,
a person familiar with the pricing said.
Ford headquarters in Dearborn, Michigan, shored up its Brazilian subsidiary with
$1.3 billion in cash injections, in nine transfers between March 2018 and
January 2021, according to the Sao Paulo corporate filings.
By late 2019, Ford was considering the key strategic shift to manufacture SUVs
in Brazil and had three models planned, according to three of the sources
familiar with the operation.
Yet many of its competitors had already been revamping their lineup to produce
such vehicles for about two years.
"The truth is, Ford failed to modernize its product lineup at the same speed as
its rivals," said Ricardo Bacellar, automotive head at KPMG's consulting arm in
Brazil.
In the end, the SUV plans never came to fruition.
By April 2020, the economic pain wrought by the pandemic forced Ford to
reevaluate its plans for Brazil, the automaker has said.
Still, Ford made commitments to the government as late as November last year to
invest more in Brazil and told its dealers in December that it expected improved
sales in 2021, according to a government announcement and the dealers'
association.
Yet just weeks later, it halted production.
It closed its three plants, the largest one in Camaçari, in the northeastern
state of Bahia. It retains only a small operation selling imports, a niche
market for high-end cars that the import tariffs make prohibitively expensive
for many people.
Ford's all-electric Mustang Mach 1, for example, which starts at $53,000 in the
United States, will sell for $94,000 in Brazil, where per capita income is much
lower.
While Ford sold 18,000 cars in Brazil in April 2019, it sold 1,500 cars in the
same month this year.
($1 = 5.2821 reais)
(Reporting by Marcelo Rochabrun; Editing by Christian Plumb, Joe White and
Pravin Char)
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