NAAMSA - 2005 QUARTERLY REVIEW OF BUSINESS CONDITIONS - by RGT

NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF AUTOMOBILE MANUFACTURERS OF SOUTH AFRICA 

PO BOX 40611, ARCADIA 0007

TELEPHONES:

(012) 323-2980/1 – 323-2003

TELEFAX:

(012) 326-3232

WEB ADDRESS:

www.naamsa.co.za

E-MAIL ADDRESS:

naamsa@iafrica.com

OFFICES:

1st FLOOR, NEDBANK PLAZA

Cnr CHURCH AND BEATRIX STREETS

ARCADIA, PRETORIA 0083

                 

                    

 N8/1 (e-mail)

15th June 2005 

To :     REPRESENTATIVES AT GENERAL MEETINGS

Gentlemen,

QUARTERLY REVIEW OF BUSINESS CONDITIONS :

MOTOR VEHICLE MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY : 1st QUARTER, 2005

ATTACHED, for information purposes, is a copy of NAAMSA’s quarterly review of business conditions for the South African motor vehicle manufacturing industry, during the first quarter of 2005, as submitted to the Director-General, Department of Trade and Industry.

Latest industry vehicle sales, export and import statistics for 1995 through 2007 are reflected on the attachment to the submission.

Key features         

 

N.M.W. VERMEULEN

DIRECTOR

sdb  

NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF AUTOMOBILE MANUFACTURERS OF SOUTH AFRICA 

PO BOX 40611, ARCADIA 0007

TELEPHONES:

(012) 323-2980/1 – 323-2003

TELEFAX:

(012) 326-3232

WEB ADDRESS:

www.naamsa.co.za

E-MAIL ADDRESS:

naamsa@iafrica.com

OFFICES:

1st FLOOR, NEDBANK PLAZA

Cnr CHURCH AND BEATRIX STREETS

ARCADIA, PRETORIA 0083

N8/1    

15th June, 2005

                                                                                                                         

The Director-General  

Department of Trade and Industry

Private Bag X84

PRETORIA

0001

Dear Sir,

 

QUARTERLY REVIEW OF BUSINESS CONDITIONS : NEW VEHICLE

MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY : QUARTER ENDED 31ST MARCH, 2005

 

NAAMSA submits the following report on business conditions in the South African new motor vehicle manufacturing industry during the first quarter of 2005. 

1.   EMPLOYMENT LEVELS AND TRENDS 

The number of persons employed by the South African new vehicle manufacturing industry – comprising major new vehicle manufacturers as well as specialist commercial truck manufacturers – during the first quarter of 2005 may be set out as follows –                                                                                                                        

 

 

Industry Total

 

Last pay week January, 2005

33 074

Last pay week February, 2005

33 527

Last pay week March, 2005

33 658

 

Compared to the 32 548 positions at the end of calendar 2004, aggregate industry employment levels increased by 1 110 jobs during the first quarter of 2005 to reach a total of 33 658 jobs.   This comes on top of the 1 185 new jobs created by the industry during 2004.

Principally, three large companies were responsible for the recruitment of new personnel during the first quarter of 2005.   In the main, the new jobs represent skilled positions.

 

2.   NUMBER OF SHIFTS

An increasing number of manufacturers operate on a multi-shift basis in the production of vehicles and components for domestic and export markets. The balance of the industry operates on a single production shift basis with a number of manufacturers operating double shifts in selected areas such as machining, press shops, paint shop operations and body shop.

3.   AVAILABILITY AND PRICE TRENDS OF COMPONENTS AND RAW MATERIALS

3.1     COMPONENTS

          Imported Components

Overall, the availability and supply of imported original equipment components, during the quarter, remained satisfactory. 

Shipping capacity availability was cited as a problem.

Prices from source remained stable. Escalating shipping and freight costs continue to impact negatively on the landed costs of imported components.

Local Components

During the first quarter of 2005, there were signs of a tightening of supply of local components due to higher local production volumes.

On pricing, local suppliers continue to experience challenges in competing with imported products which benefit from the strong Rand. Rising domestic labour, steel and fuel costs, as well as increases in global material costs, continue to be mentioned as the biggest impact on local costs.

 

3.2     RAW MATERIALS

Imported Materials

Generally, the availability of imported raw materials, where applicable, remained good.   Higher global commodity, material and oil prices continue to put pressure on costs.

Local Materials

Local raw material price movements continue to mirror international pricing trends.  Generally, the availability remains stable, however, instances of shortages of local steel were reported.

The rising prices of automotive steel will have a knock on effect on local component pricing and vehicle production costs, despite cost cutting efforts by vehicle manufacturers in other areas.

 

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

1st Qtr

2005

1st Qt 2005 Range

High

Low

Cars

66,1%

72,2%

73,2%

77,2%

79,7%

78,2%

100,0%

15,3%

Light Commercials

60,2%

62,6%

70,6%

69,6%

72,1%

80,4%

100,0%

43,7%

Medium Commercials

64,2%

69,8%

67,8%

60,7%

57,2%

70,0%

100,0%

57,0%

Heavy Commercials

74,8%

78,1%

85,7%

85,6%

85,6%

98,6%

100,0%

96,0%

During the first quarter, industry capacity utilisation levels in the light, medium and heavy truck manufacturing sectors rose sharply.   The industry’s capacity utilisation level in the car manufacturing segment was affected by one manufacturer reporting a low 15,3% capacity utilization.  Without this figure, the sector’s capacity utilization (for the other six manufacturers) averaged 88,7% during this quarter.

 

5.   NEW INVESTMENT/INVESTMENT APPROVALS : 2004 ACTUAL AND 2005 PROJECTION

 NAAMSA reports the industry’s aggregate capital expenditure on an annual basis.   Details of actual industry capex for 2000 through 2004, in Rand millions, as well as the projection for 2005 – are as follows – 

 

R Millions

Capital Expenditure

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005 Projection

Product/Local/Content/Export Investment/ Production Facilities

1 311,2

1 800,1

2 311,4

1 989,4

1 816,3

5 095,7

Land and Buildings

109,7

33,3

152,0

141,5

129,6

200,7

Support Infrastructure (I.T., R&D, Technical, etc.)

140,6

244,9

262,4

193,9

273,7

624,0

Total

1 561,5

2 078,3

2 725,8

2 324,8

2 219,6

5 920,4

During 2004, the strong Rand would have translated into lower costs of imported capital equipment (machinery/production technology).  Also, some capital expenditure originally earmarked for 2004 may have been deferred to 2005.

All the major OEM’s and three truck manufacturers participated in the survey.  Six manufacturers project increased capex for 2005, with one major OEM accounting for over half the industry’s projected investments. 

6.    BUSINESS CONDITIONS AND PERFORMANCE INDICATORS 

Business Conditions : First Quarter, 2005  

New vehicle sales during the first quarter of 2005 set new records.

2005 first quarter passenger car sales at 85 925 units recorded a further substantial improvement of 16 083 units or 23,0% compared to the 69 842 new cars sold during the corresponding quarter for 2004.   Combined commercial vehicle sales during the first quarter of 2005 at 41 156 units reflected a gain of 6 168 units or an improvement of 17,6% compared to 34 988 units sold during the corresponding quarter of 2004.

The industry’s sectoral quarterly performance is set out in the table hereunder -

Industry Domestic Sales Growth : Direction and Extent of Change

(Previous quarter’s percentage changes are reflected in brackets)

 

Qtr ended 31 Mar 2005 compared with previous Qtr ended 31 Dec 2004

Qtr ended 31 Mar 2005 compared with corresponding Qtr ended 31 Mar 2005

Passenger Cars

+ 6,5%

(- 3,5%)

+ 23,0%

(+ 27,2%)

Light Commercial Vehicles

+ 6,1%

(- 1,2%)

+ 16,0%

(+ 37,1%)

Medium Commercial Vehicles

+ 1,9%

(- 0,5%)

+ 44,2%

(+ 34,4%)

Heavy Commercial Vehicles

- 9,1%

(+ 2,7%)

+ 16,6%

(+ 27,2%)

New vehicle sales during the first quarter of 2005 reached record levels showing further strong upward momentum with sales in all four sectors registering strong, double digit\ gains compared to the corresponding quarter in 2004.

The strength in the market continues to be supported by recent interest rate reductions, stable new vehicle prices, attractive incentives offered by manufacturers and a positive economic environment. 

Export Performance :  First Quarter 2005

The following annual and quarterly vehicle export statistics summarize the industry’s export sales performance –

 

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

1st Quarter 2004

1st Quarter 2005

2005

(Projection)

Cars

10 458

18 342

52 292

58 204

97 599

113 025

114 909

101 445

22 311

21 210

120 000

Light Commercials

8 000

6 808

6 504

9 148

10 229

11 699

11 283

9 360

2 113

2 246

25 000

Medium & Heavy Commercials

1 111

748

787

679

465

582

469

448

82

119

500

Total Exports

19 569

25 898

59 583

68 031

108 293

125 306

126 661

111 253

24 506

23 575

145 500

Vehicle exports should receive a substantial boost from about the middle of 2005 onwards as a result of various new export programmes scheduled to start.

Industry Prospects For 2005 : Further Substantial Improvement In New Vehicle Sales Expected  

The exceptionally strong growth trend in South African new vehicle sales should continue throughout 2005 with the market recording, for the second successive year, record sales. A combination of strong  economic fundamentals will serve to support the positive momentum in the South African economy and demand for new motor vehicles during 2005.  These include –

  • Low inflation and relatively accommodative monetary policy.

  • Strong consumer sentiment and business confidence.

  • Stable macro-economic policies, higher government spending on infrastructural projects and rising private sector investment.

  • Improving foreign reserves and progressively positive country investment ratings.

  • Buoyant prices of South Africa’s main commodity exports.

  • Prospects of sustained real gross domestic product growth in excess of 4% per annum.

  • Higher aggregate vehicle production for both domestic and export markets.

Given the positive fundamentals and strong momentum, domestic new vehicle sales are expected to improve, in volume in terms, by at least 20% during 2005.

The industry remains decidedly upbeat about prospects for 2005 and beyond and this optimism has been factored into the latest projections reflected in the attached schedule.

Yours sincerely,  

N.M.W. VERMEULEN

DIRECTOR

sdb

15th June, 2005

   

Attachment 1  -  Industry Vehicle Sales, Export and Import Data :  1995 - 2007
(click to view)

Back to http://www.naamsa.co.za/papers/ 


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