GM Vies to Compete With Toyota in Fast-Growing Indonesia: Cars

January 19, 2012, 4:54 PM EST
By Siddharth Philip and Femi Adi

Jan. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Indonesia may be the next growth market after China for 
the automotive industry.

While the country boasts Southeast Asia’s largest economy and population, 
Indonesia’s ratio of car ownership has been among the lowest in the region. 
Now, analysts at IHS Automotive and JPMorgan Chase & Co. say the industry is 
ready to blossom because of rising incomes, urbanization and a government push 
to spur demand for low-emission vehicles.

“Indonesia’s auto market is on the verge of a boom,” said Jessada Thongpak, a 
senior analyst for Southeast Asia at IHS Automotive. “The reason why automakers 
are looking at Indonesia is because the potential for growth is high, and 
inflation and interest rates are stable.”

That’s leading carmakers from Detroit-based General Motors Co. to India’s Tata 
Motors Ltd. to gear up to challenge Japanese producers led by Toyota Motor 
Corp., which control more than 90 percent of a market with the world’s 
fourth-largest population. Vehicle sales in Indonesia are projected to rise 
more than 50 percent in five years as the growing working class demands 
minivans and compact cars.

Count GM, the world’s largest car company, among those taking notice. The maker 
of Chevrolet, Buick and Cadillac sedans plans to open a minivan factory in 
Indonesia, where it stopped making vehicles about six years ago. Ford Motor 
Co., the second- largest U.S. vehicle manufacturer, said it sees “great 
potential” in the country.

U.S. automakers aren’t the only ones vying for a slice of the Indonesian 
market. Tata Motors, for one, is gearing up to challenge Japanese producers. 
Tata has an assembly plant that builds Xenon pickups in Samutprakan, near 
Bangkok, according to the company’s website.

Incumbent’s Dominance

Indonesia’s auto market has plenty of room to grow. CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets 
estimates the country had 32 vehicles for every 1,000 people in 2010, compared 
with 123 in Thailand and 300 in Malaysia. Indonesia’s economy and population 
are bigger than those two Southeast Asian neighbors combined.

U.S. carmakers still have a long way to go before catching up or even getting 
close to Japanese brands. Out of the 894,180 vehicles sold in the country last 
year, GM accounted for less than 1 percent, according to the nation’s auto 
association.

Sales in Indonesia will jump to 1.2 million units by 2016, according to IHS 
Automotive. Such growth would allow Indonesia to challenge Thailand, which saw 
domestic production tumble 11 percent last year after its worst floods in 
almost 70 years, as the auto industry’s Southeast Asian hub.

Indonesia is heading toward “full-fledged motorization” after gross domestic 
product per capita exceeded $3,000 in 2010, Nomura Holdings Inc. analysts wrote 
in a report last month. Turkey, Malaysia and South Korea are among markets that 
have seen growth in their automotive markets pick up after GDP per capita 
exceeded that threshold, according to Aditya Srinath, a Jakarta-based analyst 
at JPMorgan.

Fuel Subsidies

The growth of the Indonesian auto market faces risks, however. Currently 
interest rates at 6 percent are “favorable” for the auto industry said Davy 
Tuilan, a director at Suzuki Motor Corp.’s Indonesia unit. If the central bank 
decides to increase those rates, “it will affect the auto industry 
significantly,” he said.

Another risk is the price of fuel. The government plans to start reducing fuel 
subsidies from April. That would leave only public-transportation vehicles, 
motorcycles and fish-delivery vans eligible for subsidies and almost double the 
price of gasoline for other motorists, according to IHS Automotive.

“We are facing risks on how customers will react once the government implements 
its plan on limiting the fuel subsidy,” said Teddy Irawan, a vice president at 
Nissan Motor Co.’s Indonesia unit.

Eco-Car

The government’s so-called Eco-car proposal to spur demand for low-emission, 
compact vehicles via incentives may take effect in 2013, according to IHS and 
JPMorgan. The plan, first announced in 2009, is still being completed, Budi 
Darmadi, a director general at the industry ministry, said in an interview.

Officials at Japan’s Suzuki and Nissan cited the future government incentives 
as an impetus for growth, while South Korea’s Hyundai Motor Co. cited the 
improving economic environment for its optimism in Indonesia.

“Indonesia is so hot for the auto industry because the economy is growing 
significantly,” said Jongkie Sugiarto, president director of Hyundai’s 
Indonesian unit.

The strength of Indonesia’s economy, lower interest rates and government 
initiatives revive memories of Japan’s emergence in the automobile industry 
half a century ago, Credit Suisse Group AG analyst Kunihiko Shiohara wrote in a 
report this week. Japanese carmakers increased production more than six-fold in 
the 1960s, accounting for an estimated 18 percent of global production by 1970 
from less than 3 percent a decade earlier.

Avanza Minivan

As more global carmakers deepen their interests in Southeast Asia, Japanese 
carmakers are aiming to defend their lead.

Toyota, which offers the nation’s best-selling Avanza minivan, is planning 1.3 
trillion rupiah ($144 million) in investments in Indonesia to boost production, 
said Joko Trisanyoto, a marketing director for Toyota’s venture in the country. 
The company operates two factories in the country that can produce as many as 
110,000 units a year.

Suzuki on Jan. 4 said it would invest 60 billion yen ($780 million) on 
increasing capacity in Indonesia, including setting up a new factory to build 
engines. In 2010, Nissan said it was investing more than $20 million at a plant 
in Indonesia to double annual capacity in the country to 100,000 vehicles by 
2013.

“Indonesia is seen as a sexy market,” Suzuki’s Tuilan said. “More investors are 
coming to Indonesia. That may stimulate the economy and market growth.”

Look for U.S. automakers to be at the front of the line.

Southeast Asia “is the next big one and we want to be present in the market,” 
said Johan Willems, a GM spokesman in Shanghai. “It’s a very important market 
for us.”

--Editors: Young-Sam Cho, Rick Schine

To contact the reporter on this story: Siddharth Philip in Mumbai at 
[email protected] .

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Young-Sam Cho at 
[email protected] .
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-0 ... -cars.html

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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