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N8/1 The Director-General
Dear Sir, QUARTERLY REVIEW OF
BUSINESS CONDITIONS : NEW VEHICLE
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Industry Total |
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Last pay week October, 2007 |
37 910 |
|
Last pay week November, 2007 |
37 916 |
|
Last pay week December, 2007 |
37 529 |
Compared to the 37 974 positions at the end of September 2007, aggregate industry employment declined by 385 jobs during the fourth quarter of 2007 to 37 529 jobs.
Overall, employment at the industry’s major employers remained relatively stable during the quarter.
The industry’s average monthly headcount in 2007 was 38 310 jobs (2006 : 37 927).
2. NUMBER OF SHIFTS
The majority of most vehicle manufacturers operate on a multi-shift basis in the production of vehicles and components for domestic and export markets. Various manufacturers operate on a single production shift basis, whilst the majority operate double shifts in selected areas such as machining, press shops, paint shop operations and body shop. In some instances, three shift operations take place.
3. AVAILABILITY AND PRICE TRENDS OF COMPONENTS AND RAW MATERIALS
3.1 COMPONENTS
Imported Components
The availability and supply of imported original equipment components, during the fourth quarter of 2007, remained good.
During the quarter, the landed cost of imported components continued to be affected by exchange rate volatility and exchange rate depreciation. Oil based products - rubber, plastics, lubricants - continued to be affected by fluctuations on international markets and exchange rate movements.
Local Components
During the fourth quarter of 2007, the availability of locally produced components normalized after the industrial disruption in sections of the component supplier industry during the third quarter.
Domestic and imported cost pressures continue to impact on prices of local components.
3.2 RAW MATERIALS
Imported Materials
Generally, the availability of imported raw materials, where applicable, remained good. Rising global commodity and oil prices continued to exert upward pressure on costs as did the weaker exchange rate during the quarter.
Increases in prices of imported stainless steel and aluminium are anticipated during 2008.
Local Materials
Local raw material price movements continue to mirror international pricing trends. Availability remains good. Local steel availability showed further improvement during the quarter, however, major increases in prices of local automotive steel grades were experienced during the quarter with further substantial increases expected during 2008.
4. UTILISATION OF PRODUCTION CAPACITY
Average motor vehicle assembly industry capacity utilisation levels, for the periods indicated, may be illustrated as follows –
|
|
Year 2000 |
Year 2001 |
Year 2002 |
Year 2003 |
Year 2004 |
Year 2005 |
Year 2006 |
Year 2007 |
4th Qtr 2007 |
4th Qtr 2007 Range |
|
| High |
Low |
||||||||||
|
Cars |
66,1% |
72,2% |
73,2% |
77,2% |
79,7% |
81,1% |
80,1% |
67,7% |
70,9% |
100,0% |
38,7% |
|
Light Commercials |
60,2% |
62,6% |
70,6% |
69,6% |
72,1% |
79,9% |
87,8% |
82,7% |
94,5% |
121,0% |
59,4% |
|
Medium Commercials |
64,2% |
69,8% |
67,8% |
60,7% |
57,2% |
84,4% |
97,9% |
91,7% |
89,5% |
100,0% |
79,0% |
|
Heavy Commercials |
74,8% |
78,1% |
85,7% |
85,6% |
86,0% |
95,9% |
95,1% |
95,3% |
87,3% |
100,0% |
62,4% |
With the exception of the new car manufacturing sector, industry average capacity utilisation levels remained at relatively high levels.
5. NEW INVESTMENT/INVESTMENT APPROVALS : 2007 ACTUAL AND 2008 PROJECTION
NAAMSA reports the industry’s aggregate capital expenditure on an annual basis. Details of actual industry capex for 2000 through 2007, in Rand millions, as well as the projection for 2008 – are as follows –
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|
R Millions |
||||||||
Capital Expenditure |
2000 |
2001 |
2002 |
2003 |
2004 |
2005 |
2006 |
2007 |
2008 Projection |
|
Product/Local/Content/Export Investment/ Production Facilities |
1 311,2 |
1 800,1 |
2 311,4 |
1 989,4 |
1 816,3 |
2 805,3 |
5 058,1 |
2 458,7 |
3 535,1 |
|
Land and Buildings |
109,7 |
33,3 |
152,0 |
141,5 |
129,6 |
512,1 |
758,0 |
382,4 |
595,7 |
|
Support Infrastructure (I.T., R&D, Technical, etc.) |
140,6 |
244,9 |
262,4 |
193,9 |
273,7 |
258,7 |
398,8 |
254,4 |
240,4 |
|
Total |
1 561,5 |
2 078,3 |
2 725,8 |
2 324,8 |
2 219,6 |
3 576,1 |
6 214,9 |
3 095,5 |
4 371,2 |
During 2007 the industry’s capital expenditure declined substantially compared to 2006, primarily as a result of uncertainty regarding the outcome of the MIDP review process. Planned investments for 2008 show some recovery, however, invariably projections tend to be higher than eventual actuals.
6. BUSINESS CONDITIONS AND PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
Business Conditions : Fourth Quarter, 2007
2007 fourth quarter passenger car sales at 89 976 units recorded a decline of 14 331 units or 13,7% compared to the 104 307 new cars sold during the corresponding quarter of 2006. Combined commercial vehicle sales during the third quarter of 2007 at 53 998 units reflected a fall of 4 117 units or a decline of 7,1% compared to 58 115 units sold during the corresponding quarter of 2006.
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Industry Domestic Sales Growth : Direction and Extent of Change (Previous quarter’s percentage changes are reflected in brackets) |
||||
|
|
Qtr ended 31 Dec 2007 compared with previous Qtr ended 30 Sept 2007 |
Qtr ended 31 Dec 2007 compared with corresponding Qtr ended 31 Dec 2006 |
||
|
Passenger Cars |
- 11,9% |
(+ 15,8%) |
- 13,7% |
(- 10,7%) |
|
Light Commercial Vehicles |
- 9,2% |
(+ 2,3%) |
- 10,5% |
(- 2,8 %) |
|
Medium Commercial Vehicles |
- 0,4% |
(+ 2,6%) |
+ 10,4% |
(- 0,07%) |
|
Heavy Commercial Vehicles |
- 2,3% |
(+ 9,1%) |
+ 15,3% |
(+ 10,4%) |
New vehicle sales during the fourth quarter of 2007 reflected a mixed picture with negative new car and light commercial vehicle sales and continued strength in new medium and heavy commercial vehicle sales.
New Vehicle Export Performance : 2007 and Projections for 2008
2007 export sales of South African produced motor vehicles declined to 171 237 units compared to 179 859 new vehicles exported during 2006 – a fall of 8 622 units or 4,8%. The main reason for the decline was due to the fact that the Mercedes-Benz factory in East London had been refurbished during the year and as a result no vehicles were produced for export for about five months during 2007.
Higher projected volumes of exports of cars and light commercial vehicles will translate into record export sales during 2008. Overall exports are projected to improve by about 66% year on year.
The following annual vehicle export statistics summarize the industry’s past and projected export sales performance -
|
|
2000 |
2001 |
2002 |
2003 |
2004 |
2005 |
2006 |
2007 |
2008 Projection |
|
Cars |
58 204 |
97 599 |
113 025 |
114 909 |
101 445 |
113 899 |
119 171 |
106 460 |
206 300 |
|
Light Commercials |
9 148 |
10 229 |
11 699 |
11 283 |
9 360 |
25 589 |
60 149 |
64 127 |
78 000 |
|
Medium & Heavy Commercials |
679 |
465 |
582 |
469 |
448 |
424 |
539 |
650 |
700 |
|
Total Exports |
68 031 |
108 293 |
125 306 |
126 661 |
111 253 |
139 912 |
179 859 |
171 237 |
285 000 |
South Africa’s Automotive Industry’s Performance in a Global Context
World new motor vehicle production in 2007 reached 73 101 695 units. This represents an increase of 3 768 090 units produced or 5,4% compared to the 69 333 605 new vehicles produced globally during 2006. Following steady increases from 2000 through 2006, the South African vehicle manufacturing industry’s share of world production declined in 2007 to 0,73% of global output.
|
|
2000 |
2004 |
2005 |
2006 |
2007 |
%Change 2007/2006 |
|
Global Vehicle Production |
58,40 million |
64,49 million |
66,55 million |
69,33 million |
73,10 million |
+ 5,4% |
|
SA Vehicle Production |
0,357 million |
0,455 million |
0,525 million |
0,588 million |
0,543 million |
- 9,0% |
|
SA Share of Global Production |
0,61% |
0,70% |
0,79% |
0,85 |
0,73% |
- 14,1% |
The current global vehicle population exceeds One Billion vehicles.
Comment on 2007 New Vehicle Sales and Prospects for 2008
During 2007, the automotive industry was affected by a series of negative events. These included progressive increases in interest rates, the introduction of the National Credit Legislation during June, 2007 which introduced stricter disciplines governing the granting of credit by financial institutions, the e-NaTIS vehicle registration problems and, during the third quarter of 2007, the negative impact of industrial disruption in the component supplier industry. These development impacted negatively on new vehicle sales, particularly new car sales, during the year.
During 2008, market sentiment and automotive industry trading conditions will be tested by the high interest rate environment, record high levels of household debt, rising inflation and volatile and increasingly vulnerable international financial markets. Consumers and businesses are likely to face a higher cost base in 2008 which in turn will dampen their ability to spend on new cars. 2008 would be a more challenging year for the South African economy with GDP growth expected to moderate to about 4,0%. On the productive side of the economy, large scale investment in infrastructure development and expansion should sustain a relatively high level of economic activity. Further support should be forthcoming as a result of strong commodity and precious metal prices. However, vehicle manufacturers and importers continue to face significant rising cost pressures as a result of domestic inflation and, more recently, substantial exchange rate weakness. To the extent that increased costs are recovered through vehicle pricing, vehicle affordability is likely to deteriorate during 2008.
In terms of current projections for 2008, the new car market was expected to contract by about 6,0%, the light commercial vehicle market by a nominal 2,2% - whilst sales of medium and heavy trucks and buses were expected to grow by about 8,0%. The projections are premised on the current prime rate of 14,5%. Should further increases in interest rates materialise during the months ahead, the projections would be revised downwards.
In contrast to the weaker domestic sales environment, production of new motor vehicles was expected to increase substantially during 2008 on the back of sharply higher vehicle export sales – rising from 534 490 vehicles in 2007 to about 630 000 vehicles in 2008, an improvement of close on 100 000 units or about 18%.
N.M.W. VERMEULEN
DIRECTORR
Attachment 1 -
Industry Vehicle Sales, Export and Import Data :
1995 - 2010
(click to view)
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