Foreign, local carmakers fear China plans to end tax break
CARMAKERS in China are fretting over whether a tax break that has propped up sales this year will be extended, with an end to the policy possibly leading to the first annual decline in sales on record for the world’s largest auto market.
The topic has dominated talk at the China (Guangzhou) International Automobile Exhibition, even as industry executives work hard to promote new SUVs and electric cars, currently the highest growth segments in the country.
“The tax cut has been very successful, it’s been a fabulous success,” said James Chao, Asia-Pacific chief for research firm IHS Markit Automotive. “But there’s going to be some payback next year — a lot of payback.”
Spooked by a slowing economy, the central government in October last year halved the sales tax for cars with engines of 1.6 liters or smaller to 5 percent. That turned around a market on the verge of sales declines in 2015 to one that has notched up 13.8 percent growth for the year to date.
Without an extension, analysts forecast annual sales would at best be flat or could decline 2-3 percent, which would be the first drop since China’s car industry association began collating data in 1997.
Concern that the tax cut will expire at the end of December as scheduled has prompted Volkswagen and others to warn of a potential drop-off in sales, adding that they have been in talks with the government on the matter.
“There is a question of what will happen with this purchase tax policy. If it really comes totally to an end, then maybe the first quarter will be a little bit more difficult,” said Jochem Heizmann, CEO of Volkswagen China, which counts the country as its biggest market.
The government has said it is considering an extension, but pundits are reluctant to make a bet on whether one will be forthcoming, noting that pushing back the expiry date would only delay a drop-off in sales.
A rapid climb in real estate prices has also lessened the need for government to stimulate the auto sector and prop up the economy, analysts say.
Some industry executives said there were expectations that the tax cut would be extended, albeit not in full. Heizmann said robust growth for the market was possible even if it was replaced by a smaller cut.
A flat or mildly declining market could be a rude shock for automakers used to double-digit growth in China and may push them to consider heavy discounts, squeezing profit margins, said Jochen Siebert, managing director of JSC Automotive.
It could also bring in to question the wisdom of aggressive production plans by both foreign and Chinese automakers. Volkswagen, for example, has said it wants annual production of 5 million vehicles by 2019, a 40 percent increase over last year.
One potential beneficiary of an expiry in the tax cut could be the luxury segment. “There are fewer 1.6-liter and less engines in premium, so if that tax cut does go away, that could be an opportunity,” said Lincoln President Amy Marentic.
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