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VW, Ford, Daimler concern chip scarcity may persist for a while

Technicians work in the assembly line of the ID electric car. 3 car in Dresden, Germany, 8 June 2021.

Matthias Rietschel | Reuters

Automakers like Ford, Volkswagen, and Daimler are still grappling with the impact of global chip scarcity, with executives warning each of the companies that a silicon shortage is likely to remain a problem.

Volkswagen CEO Herbert Diess, Daimler CEO Ola Kallenius and Ford Europe CEO Gunnar Herrmann told CNBC’s Annette Weisbach on Monday at the Munich Motor Show that it is difficult to say when the complex problem will be solved.

Germany’s Volkswagen, Europe’s largest car manufacturer, has lost market share in China due to the chip shortage, said Diess.

“We are relatively weak because of semiconductor shortages,” he said. “In China we are more affected than the rest of the world. That is why we are losing market share.”

Diess said his colleagues in China had pushed for more semiconductors and called the shortage of chips a “really big concern”.

The Wolfsburg-based company expected an improvement in the semiconductor situation after the summer vacation, but that was not the case. Malaysia, where many of Volkswagen’s suppliers are based, has been hit hard by the coronavirus in recent weeks, which has led to several plant closings.

Diess said he believes chip scarcity issues will gradually resolve as countries reduce Covid-19 transmission, but he anticipates there will be a generalized semiconductor shortage for some time. “We will face a general shortage of semiconductors because the Internet of Things is growing so fast that there will be constraints that we are trying to address,” he said.

Commodity crisis

Ford Europe’s Herrmann, meanwhile, estimates the chip shortage could last until 2024, adding that it’s difficult to say exactly when it will end.

The shortage is said to have been exacerbated by the switch to electric vehicles. For example, a Ford Focus typically uses around 300 chips, while one of Ford’s new electric vehicles can have up to 3,000 chips.

Aside from chips, there are now other bottlenecks to contend with. Ford is facing a “new raw material crisis,” said Herrmann.

“It’s not just semiconductors,” he said, adding that lithium, plastics, and steel are relatively scarce. “You find bottlenecks or restrictions everywhere.”

Car prices will rise with rising raw material prices, said Herrmann.

Despite the imbalances, Herrmann said the order intake from Ford Europe was “fantastic” and “the demand is indeed extremely strong”.

No longer functional

Kallenius from Daimler hopes that the third quarter will be the “low point” of the disruptions. “That seems to be the quarter that will be hardest hit,” he said.

“We hope to get promoted again in the fourth quarter,” said Kallenius. “But there is a certain uncertainty that we have to deal with in our production system. It has to remain flexible.”

The chip shortage has affected the automotive industry like no other. Assembly lines have been shut down and some cars are now shipped without functions based on semiconductors.

In the UK, auto production hit a new low in July, marking the worst July performance for the industry since 1956.

The German technology and mechanical engineering group Bosch, the world’s largest automotive supplier, considers semiconductor supply chains in the automotive industry to be out of date.

Harald Kroeger, member of the Bosch board of directors, told CNBC last month that supply chains collapsed last year as the demand for chips in cars, PlayStation 5s and electric toothbrushes increased worldwide.

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Business

Daimler expects intense competitors if Apple, Alibaba enter automobile market

LONDON – The CEO of Daimler in Germany believes the automaker will face stiff resistance from tech giants like Google, Apple and Alibaba if it decides to launch its own electric vehicles.

While the tech giants haven’t started selling their own cars just yet, reports suggest they could soon launch products that combine hardware and software if the electric vehicle race gets hot.

“There will be intense competition,” Daimler boss Ola Kallenius told CNBC’s Annette Weisbach on Thursday when he was asked if he was concerned about the entry of digital companies into the electric vehicle market.

“When an industry changes, I think it is natural for new players to look at the industry,” he said.

Kallenius said Daimler will “look at what the brand stands for and carry that into the next technological age,” adding that the company will be able to build on its position if it does well.

His comments come when Mercedes Benz, owned by Daimler, launches an electric version of its flagship S-class luxury sedan.

“It’s kind of the beginning of a new era,” said Kallenius, before adding that the new vehicle was very “curious”.

Prices for the luxury sedan will be announced this summer, but Kallenius said Daimler expects to make money on the vehicle from the time it is sold.

He added that the variable cost of vehicles with a large electric battery is higher than that of vehicles with a traditional internal combustion engine.

“Our task in this decade of transformation is on the one hand to reduce variable costs and restore margin parity in all of our segments,” said Kallenius.

Electric vehicle technology is “still in its infancy” and there is “a lot to be done,” he continued. “It will be scaled and we will have technological developments. I am optimistic that we can restore the margins to which we are accustomed.”

Daimler versus Tesla

Daimler’s shares have risen by more than 173% year-on-year in the past 12 months and were quoted on Thursday at 75 euros per share.

“We have positive momentum in our stock,” said Kallenius, adding that this was due to improved financial performance and the company’s “technology strategy for the future.”

However, Daimler’s market capitalization has fallen from around 185 billion euros today in 1998 to just 80 billion euros. Meanwhile, Tesla’s market capitalization has risen to $ 694 billion.

“Now if we look at the total market capitalization of every single auto player in the world, you get an impressive number,” said Kallenius.

He added, “We need to make sure that the distribution of that total market cap is moving more in our favor. We are working on that.”

Like other automobile manufacturers, Daimler’s business was negatively impacted by the global shortage of chips.

“We can currently sell more than we produce,” said Kallenius