If current trends persist, Asia's once independent and dynamic automobile
industry will remain Asian only in a geographical sense. In terms of
ownership, it would be a mere 'branch' of Western capitalism. This is
because, during and after the years of slow growth in Japan and the
financial crises in East Asia, large chunks of the industry have been
acquired by bargain-hunting Western automobile companies.
This 'Western coup' in the Asian automobile sector is the culmination
of two trends. To start with, a merger, acquisition and alliance wave
in the international automobile industry that has gained momentum ever
since the DaimlerChrysler merger in 1998. As a result of that wave,
six big players control 75 per cent of the 44 million-strong global
vehicle market. Since Asia is the most rapidly growing segment of that
market, it has emerged the thrust area for these leading players. Secondly,
this process has been substantially aided by the liberalisation wave
of the 1990s in Asia and the crises that afflicted some Asian countries
more recently, which have not merely opened up the Asian automobile
industry to foreign investors, but virtually forced some of them to
go out in search international suitors for ailing domestic firms.
The most recent instance of an Asian automobile group that has fallen
victim to these tendencies is debt-ridden Daewoo, saddled with liabilities
estimated at $16 billion. At the end of June, after a three-month long
process, a restructuring committee consisting of Daewoo's creditors
chose Ford Motors as the sole bidder for the South Korean car manufacturer.
Ford, the world's second largest carmaker, had reportedly offered Daewoo's
creditors $6.8 billion for full control over the automobile giant. If
the final terms of takeover offered by Ford within a sixty-day period
are found acceptable to the Daewoo Restructuring Committee, Ford would
have access to a 2 million cars-a-year manufacturing capacity in Asia.
The run up to Ford's preliminary victory, saw five players involved
in the race for Daewoo: Ford, GM, DaimlerChrysler, Fiat and Hyundai
Motors. GM, which had a joint venture with Daewoo sometime in the past
and was working out a strategic alliance with it subsequently was the
most favoured candidate. And till about a year back GM was the only
player Daewoo's creditors were negotiating with. Perhaps because GM
expected too favourable a bargain, the restructuring committee decided
to go in for an auction involving five players.
However, the worldwide restructuring of automobile industry through
mergers, acquisitions and strategic alliances soon reduced the field
to three. One alliance resulting from that wave was between GM and Fiat
Auto in which the former acquired a 20 per cent stake in the latter
and Fiat's top shareholders took a 6 per cent stake in GM. These crossholdings
were expected to provide the material base for a strategic alliance
in world markets. Not surprisingly the two firms joined hands to bid
for Daewoo.
The other joint bid came from DaimlerChrysler and Hyundai. As part
of its bid for Daewoo, DaimlerChrysler struck a deal with Hyundai, wherein
it acquired a 10 per cent stake in the latter for an estimated $400
billion. What is significant is that, as part of the transaction, DaimlerChrysler
secured an option to increase its initial 9.9 per cent stake by an additional
5 per cent in three years. This, together with the 4.6 per cent of Hyundai
owned by Mitsubishi companies, of which Mitsubishi Motors is DaimlerChrysler's
Japanese alliance partner, could take the stake of the German-US group
to almost 20 per cent of the South Korean carmaker. This could change
the balance of ownership at Hyundai, with DaimlerChrysler emerge eventually
as the largest shareholder, ahead of the family of Chung Ju-yung, the
founder of the Hyundai group, which holds a 11.8 per cent stake in the
company.
This potential change at Hyundai seems with hindsight more significant
that the joint bid for Daewoo made by the two companies. If the bid
had succeeded, Hyundai would have indirectly controlled 99 per cent
of Korean car market. Since the government would have been forced to
respond to the emergence of such a monopoly, it is unlikely that even
Juergen Schrempp, DaimlerChrysler chairman, would have expected to win
Daewoo. What in all probability was far more important for him was the
tie-up with Hyundai, which gave the group access to the Korean market
and a major presence in the Asian market as a whole.
The point to note is that, if Ford takes Daewoo and DaimlerChrysler
succeeds in winning control at Hyundai the take over of the Korean car
industry by Western capital would be near complete. That take over deserves
more attention than it has received, given the fact that South Korea
is the second largest car maker in Asia and Daewoo and Hyundai have
a major presence in international markets as well. However, the Western
invasion does not stop even here. In May, Renault took over Samsung
Motors at US$562 million through negotiation with its creditors and
agreed to set up a joint venture with Samsung Group, which is capitalized
at 360 billion won (US$415 million) and has assets worth 1 trillion
won (US$870 million). Clearly, South Korea's automobile industry has
been virtually recolonised.
But the process neither begins or ends in Korea. It has touched Asia's
largest car producer Japan as well. More than a year ago, French car
maker Renault looking for a place under the sun as a global firm, acquired
a stake of 35 per cent in debt-ridden Japanese auto-major Nissan for
$4.3 billion. The acquisition gave French firm a veto and a significant,
even if not controlling voice, on the Board. For Renault, this meant
a break from its European isolationism and a presence in Asian and American
markets through its Japanese operations.
The Renault entry comes in the wake of a gradual increase in Western
presence in Japan's highly-protected automobile industry. After Ford's
acquisition of small car-maker Mazda two decades ago, the world's largest
automobile producer General Motors begam investing in a number of Japanese
car makers. It now owns 49 per cent of Isuzu, 9.9 per cent of Suzuki
Motors and 20 per cent of Fuji Heavy Industries, which controls Subaru.
But the Western presence has grown rapidly more recently. In March this
year, DaimlerChrysler bought a 34 per cent stake in Mitsubishi Motors,
Japan's fourth-biggest car maker. The take-over came in the wake of
serious financial trouble at Mitsubishi, which unlike other Japanese
majors had concentrated on the Japanese market, selling 65 per cent
of its vehicles there. When slowing growth generated financial difficulties,
DaimlerChrysler found the opportunity. Since then Mitsubishi has been
restructuring its operations, increasingly targeting markets abroad
and even planning a shift in headquarters to the US.
As a result of such developments, to quote the London Economist, "the
industry's composition is not what might have been expected ten years
ago. The Japanese producers, who were then terrifying the world, are
today mostly being folded into foreign groups. The biggest, Toyota,
is slipping down the size league; little Honda survives only because
it is nimble and makes products other than cars. Detroit, once tipped
for the rustheap by doomsters, is back with a vengeance."
The reasons for this rush East are not hard to find. On the surface,
the market for cars in the West (Europe and America) appears to be in
the midst of an almost unprecedented long-boom. Yet, analysts report,
the industry there is plagued with over-capacity to the tune of 25 per
cent, with damaging consequences for the bottom line of companies. The
results are most stark in the UK, where two of the largest car factories
employing more than 12000 workers are on the brink of closure. The first
is the BMW plant at Longbridge in Birmingham. The second is the Ford
plant at Dagenham, which is reportedly on the block as part of a major
reform by the company of its troubled European operations. These threats
are real, because Rover the BMW major recorded close to a $1 billionm
loss last year and Ford in Britain is reportedly leaking close to £60
million, besides being saddled with excess capacity and outdated capacities.
This problem of excess capacities and weak profits has forced firms
to turn their attention to the Asian market, which is expected to revive
sharply in the wake of the crisis. Also with Asian currencies having
depreciated substantially, Asia has once again emerged as a competitive
source for world markets. Not surprisingly, Daimler's chief, Jurgen
Schrempp, has reportedly stated that he wants the surging Asian market
to provide a quarter of sales within a decade, compared with 3.2 per
cent today,
The way in which this Asia-based expansion is sought to be achieved
is to use the voluntary and forced liberalisation of foreign investment
laws, the depressed state of markets and the extremely difficult financial
situation faced by debt-burdened corporations, to take over what were
some of the most competitive industrial capacities at bargain prices.
In the event, once independent challengers of Western automobile power
are now turning into outsourcing subsidiaries of automobile majors from
the West. As a corollary, the acquisitions, mergers and alliances that
recent developments have spawned is changing the structure of the world's
automobile industry, because Asia has been important in the international
car industry both as market and supplier. Three big groups are expected
to dominate the industry globally: GM, Ford and DaimlerChrysler in that
order. Taking account of all partners and alliances GM is estimated
to control 20 per cent of the world's market, with Ford following close
behind. If these firms manage to acquire the likes of Toyota and Volkswagen,
they could together occupy close to three-quarters of the markets. Concentration
has proceed apace with the gradual erosion of indigenous production
in Asia. In a virtual replay of an old act, centralised capital from
the West is once again colonising the East. The difference is that this
time around, the East is industrialised and internationally competitive.
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