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After a colossal 40 percent reduction in vehicle sales in the first quarter year on year, automobile assemblers are biting the bullet and slashing prices, offering discounts and deals, the whole nine yards! Companies are citing rupee appreciation as the reason for these price reductions, but their financials suggest otherwise. They have to bring volumes up, rupee appreciation or not.

Despite being a volumetric market leader, Pakistan Suzuki (PSX: PSMC) has had some of the toughest time since FY18 began. Since Jun-18, the company incurred quarterly losses in 12 out of the 21 quarters under study. As the graph suggests, the company’s prices were not keeping up with the costs it incurred during production. In only recent quarters, the company raised prices enough to get far ahead of its costs, but its income flows barely come up for breath.

Though Honda has been more or less profitable, in the last two recorded quarters, it incurred a loss of Rs824 million and made a small profit in the succeeding quarter of Rs145 million, saved by customer advances that show up in “other income”.Though the company raised prices significantly in the past year, it seems nothing could prepare it for the costs of production it would incur—the latter higher than revenue, for every unit sold.

Indus Motors, however, is in a league of its own. Despite declining volumes, it has managed to sell a higher share of SUV/IMVs than ever before, which should be attributed to its improving strength. Illustratively, in FY23, Fortuner and Hilux models were 39 percent of the company’s total CKD sales compared to 24 percent last year, and 18 percent the year before that. In the last two quarters of FY23, the company tried to make up for its rising costs (See graph) through substantially improved revenues but in the previous quarters, its costs were piling up while revenues were stagnant or falling below. Though the company earned solid profits (Rs 9.6billion in FY23), and also offered dividends to its shareholders, its margins had shrunk to 4 percent—the lowest margins in its recorded history. This is not an easily ignorable number! In fact, at 84 percent of before-tax earnings, it was once again “other income” that saved the day after a significant drop in EBITDA during the year (down 57%).

The industry is visibly struggling, and the response is price reduction which coincides with a breather in the form of rupee appreciation. Except for Suzuki, nearly all players have reduced prices and/or offered discounts on different models to offload their inventories and give a boost to volumes.Honda and Kia have also come up with car schemes of their own to make the higher prices palatable to the prospective buyer by offering instalment plans—Honda targeting HR-V, BR-V, Aspire buyers while Kia’s offer is limited to its least desirable vehicle Sorento.

One might “appreciate” how automakers are finally reducing prices when the rupee appreciates, but these price reductions represent more than just that. In the past, the relationship between PKR-dollar parity and automobile prices has been typically unidirectional where prices are raised once rupee depreciates, but when the rupee appreciates, assemblers wait it out until it depreciates again and hold off a fresh price increase.

The truth is, warning bells have been wrung and assemblers need volumes.

Comments

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Mustafa Nov 02, 2023 09:55am
There is a simple logic. We had an economy which worked with the help of big chunks of loan (leaders pumped money into the market to gain votes) and now friendly countries are not giving loans... So sales can improve by 15-20% maximum... Remittance growth was due to COVID (countries gave money to common people and expenditure went to zero, as everyone was sitting at home) .. P.S :- This Shape of Economy is nearly the Real Face of Economy
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Zahoor uddin Nov 02, 2023 11:21am
The greed have its own consequences. These auto assemblers have been selling their sub standard quality and discontinued car models from the world on higher prices. Even in neighbor country India , these japanese auto companies are selling top export able models in less prices compare to Pakistan. Pakistani auto assemblers have increased the prices to a level, where it is out of reach to the masses. Rest in peace Auto cartel !!.
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Zahoor uddin Nov 02, 2023 12:25pm
Since beginning , the Pakistani auto assemblers set the policy to assemble the discontinued car models from world market and get the jigs , fixtures and other required tools in through away prices from the parent company . That's the reason , Pakistani auto assemblers never exported the local cars which lack even safety system such as ABS brake , catalytic converter and safety air bags etc.etc . Pakistan is facing the worst climate change affect in the world and ranked third or fourth countries. A major contribution of emission gases are these auto assemblers who have been producing old car technologies like carburetor based old and non Euro engines , the world have discarded decades ago. These auto companies/assemblers would have been trialed , fined and banned for crime against humanity who are facing climate change affect , like floods , hurricane and global warming if were assembling , other than Pakistan. Automobile are the major contributor of the emission gasses in Pakistan .
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Zahoor uddin Nov 02, 2023 02:03pm
The aumobile companies around the world are selling the latest car models on a price including R&D cost , make sense . Whereas Pakistani auto assemblers adopted to assemble world's discarded old and stripped down models,( removed safety and other necessary features to reduce the cost of the car ) from the parent companies and spent none on R&D or other development work and yet selling on a price of latest model of the same company outside of Pakistan???. Nobody is going to ask them , people are not buying these old models anymore on this price. There might be a reason of high interest rate set on 22-25% markup , for not buying . Auto aseembler have been increasing the prices , knowing that even selling comes down , their profit is still there. But high intrest rate and loss of purchase power back fire their strategy.
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Az_Iz Nov 03, 2023 12:34am
IK government tried to reduce taxes on automobiles to boost production. These companies instead raised prices, pocketing the tax breaks. The government should significantly increase the taxes on big cars and suvs.
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Zahoor uddin Nov 03, 2023 03:38pm
@Az_Iz, There is not a fair competition, all auto companies in Pakistan behaving like cartel or mafia , successfully blocked the used cars import of JDM cars and established their monopoly. Used cars import is much cheaper , compared to so called assembling substandard cars . The car companies blackmailing government for the last fourty years on the name of local manufacturing , no target has acheived so far , except some plastic and sheet metal parts , every thing is imported . A precious foreign exchange is going out side . There is a need to allow strict used car import policy to bring down cartel in senses !!!.
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Z H Hahsmi Nov 06, 2023 10:44am
@Zahoor uddin , are we comparing ourselves with India? we should do that with Bhutan , Nepal , Myanmar , Cambodia etc ...
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