April car sales positive but automakers still worried

Tuesday, May 12, 2015 11:50

Cars from auto firms including Toyota Motor Vietnam, Ford Vietnam and Honda Vietnam have occupied high percentage of marketshare in the Vietnamese market. Most of them have at least one auto manufacturing factory in Thailand or Indonesia. — Photo vneconomy.vn

HA NOI (Biz Hub) — April was a positive month for Vietnamese auto sales, though carmakers have claimed difficulties conducting business in the country's unstable and undeveloped automobile industry.

The month's sales figures released by Viet Nam Automobile Manufacturers Association (VAMA) showed that nearly 18,200 units were sold in the domestic market, marking an increase of 11 per cent from March this year and 60 per cent from the same period last year.

Some 9,423 passenger cars and 8,755 commercial vehicles were sold in April.

Domestic carmakers assembled 13,980 units, 9 per cent higher than the previous month, while 4,198 units were imported, a rise of 19 per cent compared with the month before.

The April figures have helped increase the total sale of more than 66,900 units in the first four months of this year, up by 62 per cent versus last year.

Of the total sales, the VAMA members together sold 16,643 units, 9 per cent and 65 per cent more than they did in March this year and April last year, respectively. The figures brought the total sales to 57,477 units in the first four months of this year, 68 per cent higher than the same period last year.

Truong Hai Automobile JSC (Thaco) is one of the major automakers to take the lead in the market; with 36.9 per cent market share and selling 21,324 cars in the four months, it made a year-on-year gain of 97 per cent.

Toyota Motor Viet Nam retained its second position with 25.9 per cent market share and a growth of 43 per cent compared with the same period last year. Ford Viet Nam took the third and Honda managed the fourth position with 9.7 per cent and 4.2 per cent market share, respectively.

While the market has been recording an increase in sales from the beginning of this year, the question how to boost the domestic automobile industry when the 2018 import tax on cars from ASEAN countries drops to zero has been raised at many automobile events held recently.

During a dialogue on policies for Viet Nam's automobile industry development, held by the Ministry of Industry and Trade's Heavy Industry Department two weeks ago, Chairman of Thaco Tran Ba Duong said the domestic market in the recent years had been of locally-assembled cars, or complete knockdown (CKD) units. Hence, businesses that strongly invested in CKD, their distribution and servicing, occupied the market.

Duong noted that by 2018, when import tax on cars will be zero per cent, cars will become much cheaper. If imports replace locally manufactured units, the price of cars can be cut by 5 per cent of import tax on spare part.

He remarked that domestic carmakers would have to cut their production costs by 15-20 per cent in all phases, from production to distribution and sales, to offer their products at competitive prices.

President of VAMA Yoshihisa Maruta, who is also General Director of Toyota Motor Viet Nam, said a zero per cent import tax would affect domestic car production, and therefore, it would become important to provide more support for domestic automobile development. Other ASEAN countries such as Thailand and Malaysia had supported automakers by providing them with "special tools" to boost domestic production.

He emphasised that with a population of more than 90 million, the Vietnamese market had the potential and ability to develop as strongly as Thailand.

Maruta said the VAMA members hoped to continue manufacturing in Viet Nam. The association members would send a proposal on policies to the government this month.

Deputy Minister Tran Tuan Anh confirmed the government's view on the automobile industry's important role in the nation's industry development strategy.

According to Anh, the domestic industry has the capacity to manufacture and assemble about 460,000 units per year. However, it has not met all the criteria for becoming a real automobile manufacturing industry; the domestic spare part production is still low at 15 to 50 per cent.

The main reasons are that the country's industry was born much after other regional countries, the development of support industry and transport infrastructure have not been synchronized, and that the people's living standard is not high.

Concluding the dialogue, Tuan Anh noted that the participants' ideas were useful for management bodies, especially for creating policies and strongly establishing the country's automobile industry by 2020 and a vision for 2030. The ministry and relevant sectors would continue to draw strong policies that would help boost the domestic car production effectively in the future. — VNS

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