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Brexit Deal Is Too Little, Too Late for U.K.'s Car Industry - Bloomberg

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The auto industry dodged disaster when the U.K. and European Union sealed a post-Brexit trade accord, but not before carmakers announced factory closures and called off plans to make several new vehicles in the country.

More damage may still be done even with last week’s deal. Automakers including Nissan Motor Co. might struggle to qualify some U.K.-assembled models for tariff-free export to the EU as they evaluate whether they source enough of their components locally. Costs associated with having to switch suppliers and the burdens of customs declarations, certifications and audits could still leave car companies convinced they’re better off investing elsewhere.

“This is still a thin deal with major implications and costs for automotive,” said David Bailey, a business economics professor at Birmingham Business School in England. “Much will depend on the degree of flexibility allowed and the degree of phasing in.”

Industry Under Threat

Number of cars produced annually

Source: SMMT 2019 data

Note: Annual vehicle production at Britain’s eight largest plants. JLR number is the total for its three plants

The Brexit deal eliminates the risk of widespread exodus but still could fall short for carmakers with too little leeway to take on more expenses. Any further fallout could have big implications for the U.K. economy. The country’s auto industry employs more than 860,000 people, over a fifth of whom are on staff at vehicle and parts factories. Carmakers sent 42.4 billion pounds ($57 billion) worth of autos and components overseas last year, 13% of the nation’s total exports.

The domestic market is unlikely to compensate for any lost overseas sales. Registrations already dropped for three consecutive years before being decimated by the pandemic, plunging 31% through November.

Ones to Watch

Nissan and its Japanese peers are the companies to watch in the wake of the deal. The outlook already was bleak before the Brexit accord was clinched.

WATCH: What are the post-Brexit challenges faicng the U.K. auto industry?

(Source: Bloomberg)

The company recently decided against making an electric model at its Northern England factory and almost two years ago scrapped plans to build another sport utility vehicle at the same site. Honda Motor Co. is closing its only U.K. car plant next year.

Nissan and Toyota Motor Corp.’s hybrid and electric models built in England are cut some slack in the Brexit trade deal, with the accord allowing a greater proportion of vehicle content to come from outside the U.K. or EU. Still, the initial so-called rules of origin require 10 percentage points more local content than what the U.K. sought.

Rules of Origin
  • Gasoline and diesel cars need to be made with at least 55% local content to avoid tariffs -- 5 percentage points more than what automakers and the U.K. wanted.
  • Electric vehicles and hybrids will need 40% local content, 10 percentage points more than what the U.K. sought.
  • Until 2023, batteries can have as much as 70% overseas content, and EVs and hybrids can have as much as 60% foreign content.
  • From 2024 to 2026 -- when European battery production is expected to be further along -- batteries can have 50% overseas content and EVs and hybrids 55% foreign content.

It’s unclear whether Nissan’s all-electric Leaf hatchbacks built in Sunderland have enough local content to avoid levies. While Nissan welcomes the trade agreement, it will now “assess the detailed implications for our operations and products,” Azusa Momose, a spokeswoman in Yokohama, said by email.

Toyota’s Corolla hybrid and combustion-engine compact cars built in Burnaston will qualify for tariff-free export to the EU, said Sonomi Aikawa, a spokeswoman in Tokyo. The company benefits from its engine plant in Wales, she said.

Nissan Decides Against Making EV in U.K. Over Brexit Worries

Newly manufactured automobiles leave on a car transporter from the Nissan Motor Co. plant in Sunderland, on Dec. 18.

Photographer: Ian Forsyth/Bloomberg

The carmakers’ tariff requirements going forward may be affected by their plans to bring more of their battery supply chains to the region. Electric vehicles will be given another six years to bring their amount of foreign content below 45%, the threshold gasoline and diesel cars will be held to immediately.

“The timings underscore the urgent need for government to create the conditions that will attract large-scale battery manufacturing to the U.K. and transform our supply chains,” said Mike Hawes, chief executive of the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders, the U.K. car industry’s trade group. “Improving the competitiveness of the U.K. will be essential to help mitigate the additional costs and burdens brought about by our new trading relationship.”

‘Green Light’

Other carmakers have been putting off investments in U.K. plants pending the outcome of trade talks.

BMW AG delayed work on a next-generation Mini platform due to uncertainties over the U.K.’s trade relations with the EU. Chief Financial Officer Nicolas Peter said this month BMW would consider making Mini cars in Germany or China if tariffs undermine the business case of producing them in the U.K.

Vauxhall's Automobile Plant Ahead Of Strategy Announcement

Automobiles sit in the car park at the Vauxhall production line plant and distribution center in Ellesmere Port.

Photographer: Anthony Devlin/Bloomberg

PSA Group CEO Carlos Tavares said in March the maker of Vauxhall cars would determine whether there was a business case for its factory in Ellesmere Port, and that the company could ask the British government to compensate for any trade barriers that may arise.

BMW and PSA welcomed the trade deal, while cautioning that they’d need to closely examine the agreement to assess the ramifications for their business.

“It’s hoped that the deal now gives a green light to major investments in the U.K. that had been stalled amid Brexit uncertainty,” said Bailey, the Birmingham Business School professor. “There will be extra costs for the industry in terms of non-tariff barriers, but things could have been much worse.”

— With assistance by Stefan Nicola, Christoph Rauwald, William Wilkes, Shiho Takezawa, and Tsuyoshi Inajima

(Updates with domestic market outlook in the fifth paragraph.)

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