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Foreign auto makers exiting China are making a smart move

Strategic reductions by many companies are a sign of pragmatism and an acknowledgement that the world’s largest car market isn’t necessarily a profitable one. Pricing power, government subsidies, and the speedy adoption of new-energy vehicles like battery and hybrid-powered models by Chinese automakers made foreign brands increasingly redundant

January 31, 2024 / 12:35 IST
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Foreign suppliers attempting to crack China must show pragmatism. (Representative image)

The steady drumbeat of automakers and suppliers cutting their presence in China is almost enough to inspire pity. There’s no need. Strategic reductions, including last week’s announcement by a major Japanese parts maker, are a sign of pragmatism and an acknowledgement that the world’s largest car market isn’t necessarily a profitable one.

Nidec Corp, which makes motors used in power steering systems and electric drive trains, said it would recognise a restructuring expense as it restarts the China strategy to cut costs and limit unprofitable orders. The company slashed its full-year operating income forecast by 18 percent as a result. Nidec isn’t withdrawing completely, and instead will shift to localising product development and procurement.

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The Kyoto-based company knew that competition in the Chinese electric-vehicle sector would be fierce, but not this fierce. “The more we make, the more our losses grow,” Nidec co-founder Shigenobu Nagamori said. “Our customers and our competitors are all in the red.”

Going forward, the company believes that it can pick the money-making areas of the car sector — including parts of the fast-growing EV business — instead of expending energy in the hyper-competitive and unprofitable ones.