Does China’s 12-Month Losing Streak In Auto Sales Signal Slowing Growth In World’s Largest Auto Market?

Does China’s 12-Month Losing Streak In Auto Sales Signal Slowing Growth In World’s Largest Auto Market?

IHS Markit says it expects light-duty vehicles sales in China this year to decline by around 6 percent from 2018. Electric vehicle sales remain a bright spot but not enough to offset sales declines overall, new analysis says.

China’s light vehicle (LV) sales fell nearly 10 percent in June 2019 from prior year – the 12th consecutive month sales declined – casting new doubts on what has been the world’s biggest growth engine for auto sales, a recent analysis by business information provider IHS Markit says.

Total LV sales in China over the past 12 months (July 2018 to June 2019) were 25,396,063, down more than 10 percent from the prior 12-month period. Sales in the United States during the same stretch were 17,149,780, a decrease of 1.5 percent from the previous 12 months.

China’s auto sales downturn began in mid-2018 and the country closed out that year with an annual decline in LV sales for the first time this century.

HIS Markit’s Mobility and Energy Future analysis explores what may be behind falling Chinese auto sales. It asks, does the recent stretch of monthly declines represent a weak period, reflecting economic factors and the U.S.-China “trade war,” or a structural shift toward a “new normal” of lower sales?

“One of the major axioms of the global automobile industry, that China will continue to be a growth engine of world auto sales, is no longer the case,” said Daniel Yergin, vice chairman, IHS Markit and chair of Mobility and Energy Future project. “Whether declining LV sales in China is a blip in a multidecade upward trajectory or the beginning of a ‘new normal’ of slower – and at times negative – growth, this is the key question.”

Should the decline in auto sales be more protracted than it is now, it would likely prompt a fundamental reassessment of automakers’ strategies, according to HIS Markit’s analysis. As it is, the slowdown has already unsettled a global auto industry that has been geared to high growth in China.

A new Mobility and Energy Future report from IHS Markit, titled “China’s Auto Sales: Why Have They Fallen As Much as They Have?” identifies a mix of macroeconomic and auto industry-specific factors that have contributed to China’s auto sales slowdown – a slowdown that has been surprisingly consistent across all of China’s provinces and despite continued economic growth, says IHS.

“Recent sales trends point to a decoupling of car sales and economic growth in China,” said Nigel Griffiths, chief automotive strategist, IHS Markit. “This is a fundamental shift since the two have been strongly correlated up this point.”

Among the factors contributing to the sales downturn:

  • Less availability of auto loans – Since spring 2018, the Chinese government has been clamping down on the shadow banking system, including peer-to-peer lending platforms. China’s car finance market is traditionally restrictive, with high deposit requirements for car loans.
  • Dealer destocking – Particularly since January 2019, dealers have been attempting to lower stock levels. This is a normal adjustment in mature markets. But it is a relatively new business reality for Chinese dealers.
  • Accelerated transition to China 6 emission standards-compliant vehicles – Just over half of the Chinese market by sales volume has opted to introduce China 6 emission standards (similar to Euro 6 vehicle emissions standards) well ahead of the July 2020 national deadline. The accelerated transition is distorting the market, with a temporary effect of pushing back factory sales to the dealer network.
  • Tax policy changes – Previous cuts to the sales tax on smaller-engine cars “pulled forward” some sales that would have otherwise been made in 2018 and beyond.
  • Growth of ride hailing – IHS Markit estimates that the number of rides rose 28 percent in 2018 and similar growth is expected in 2019. Chinese car sales for 2019 are expected to be 300,000 units lower than would have been the case if these new mobility options were not available.
  • Trade War – Recent escalations in the U.S.-China trade fight could add to the declines, according to the analysis. In May, the United States ratcheted up tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese imports from 10 percent to 25 percent. IHS Markit now expects U.S. tariffs on China to result in 500,000 fewer sales of light-duty vehicles (LVs) in China than would otherwise occur during 2020.

The one bright spot amid the downturn has been electric vehicles (EVs), the analysis says. New registrations of EVs (defined as battery electric vehicles [BEVs] and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles [PHEVs]) in China rose at a monthly average of 85 percent during July 2018-March 2019 compared to year-earlier period. However, EV sales are not enough to offset the significant declines in internal combustion engine vehicles.

“The continued strength of EV sales in China is likely largely the result of supportive government policies, including subsidies and a production mandate for new energy vehicles,” said Elena Pravettoni, senior economist, IHS Markit. “But EVs still remain a small fraction of the total Chinese market.”

New registrations of EVs for the first quarter of 2019 were 222,602 – less than 4 percent of China’s total car sales in that period, the IHS Markit analysis shows.

IHS Markit said it does expect LV sales in China to eventually stabilize and return to positive growth in the coming future, with average annual gains of about 3 percent from 2020-2025, even when accounting for continued deceleration of gross domestic product growth. By comparison, annual gains averaged 7 percent from 2011-2017.

“This is a substantial correction but the expectation still is that some short-term market distortions will clear up as the contributing factors dissipate,” said Jeff Meyer, director, IHS Markit. “Recent data on final consumer demand is at last indicating that the market may be at or nearing a bottom. But should the decline be more protracted, it could prompt a fundamental strategic reassessment by automakers for what, up to now, has been the world’s biggest growth engine for auto sales.”

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