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- <text id=93TT0913>
- <title>
- Jan. 11, 1993: Running On Empty
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 11, 1993 Megacities
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 26
- Running On Empty
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Japan's once thriving automakers now face sagging domestic demand,
- stagnant overseas markets and inflated costs
- </p>
- <p>By EDWARD W. DESMOND/TOKYO
- </p>
- <p> Two years ago, Yasuharu Kondo was overwhelmed with
- customers at his Toyota showroom in Tokyo. Sales were booming,
- and most shoppers looking for top-of-the-line models, the best
- their yen could buy. Those days are gone; today Kondo surveys
- a showroom full of sparkling new cars--and not a customer in
- sight. "In my 30 years as a salesman," he says, "I have never
- seen it as bad as this."
- </p>
- <p> The lament echoes across the $339 billion Japanese auto
- industry, which finds itself running low on gas. The industry
- accounts for 10% of Japan's overall economy; thus its falling
- fortunes are a major factor in a deepening recession. Domestic
- car and truck sales are down 13% from the 1990 peak of 7.7
- million vehicles, and profits for the five biggest carmakers--Toyota, Nissan, Honda, Mitsubishi and Mazda--are off about 64%
- from the same year. Some of the smaller companies, like Isuzu,
- have been in the red for two years and may soon be joined by the
- likes of Nissan and Mazda.
- </p>
- <p> In normal times, the automakers would trim expenses,
- adjust to new market trends and wait for business to improve,
- but these are not normal times. While the U.S. is making a
- modest comeback in car sales, Europe and Japan show no signs of
- a turnaround. And none of the world's major car markets are
- likely to return to the headlong expansion of the 1980s. That
- is a particularly painful prospect for the Japanese companies,
- which have justified continuing investment in new plants and
- models on the premise of selling ever more cars.
- </p>
- <p> The result is a shake-out among Japan's 11 domestic
- companies, with the smaller firms suffering the heaviest impact.
- Their emergency measures include reductions in product lines,
- severe cost cutting, mergers with other automakers and drastic
- rethinking of business practices. In mid-December, sixth-ranked
- Isuzu announced that it was getting out of the passenger-car
- business to concentrate on its truck business. Second-ranked
- Nissan is slowly absorbing ninth-ranked Fuji Heavy Industries,
- the parent of ailing Subaru.
- </p>
- <p> On top of the global slump, Japan's automakers face
- increasingly tough, lean rivals. In the U.S., where total auto
- sales increased an estimated 1.5% in 1992 over the previous
- year, the once burgeoning Japanese share of the market has
- retreated slightly, to 30%. The strong yen and an attempt to
- inflate prices overseas to offset weak profits at home have made
- Japanese vehicles more expensive in the U.S. A mid-priced
- American-built car now typically costs $1,500 less than its
- Japanese counterpart. Another factor is that Japanese companies
- are weak in the light-truck category, where such vehicles as
- Dodge pickups and the Ford Explorer are driving off with the
- lion's share of a market niche that grew more than 18% last
- year, to 4.5 million vehicles.
- </p>
- <p> Japan's setback provides a moment of respite for America's
- Big Three, which have problems of their own. GM, the most
- bloated U.S. automaker, plans to lay off 74,000 of its 360,000
- workers in a bid to cut costs. Ford will post an estimated $6
- billion loss for 1992, largely because of a huge write-off for
- future retirement obligations. Chrysler remains saddled with $13
- billion in high-interest debt.
- </p>
- <p> For Japanese automakers, the worst problems are at home,
- where the excesses of the country's so-called bubble economy in
- the late 1980s set the stage for today's trouble. Fast economic
- growth and the boom in real estate and stock-market prices gave
- Japanese buyers the urge--and the money--to flock to
- showrooms. Result: a surge of nearly 50% in passenger-car sales
- between 1987 and 1991.
- </p>
- <p> Faced with a tide of increasingly discriminating
- consumers, the manufacturers dove headlong into the race for
- market share. They invested heavily in plants and engineering
- to create a wider range not only of models but also of
- variations within model lines. "They listened to car dealers who
- said, `We need 16 types of steering wheels to impress
- customers,' " says Benjamin Moyer, an auto analyst at Merrill
- Lynch Japan. "No one stopped to think about the long-range
- impact on costs." One effect was a golden era of design, as the
- companies competed strenuously to create graceful new bodies,
- innovative engine technology and an amazing array of options,
- including solar-powered air conditioning and satellite-based
- computer guidance systems. In all areas, cost seemed to be no
- object.
- </p>
- <p> Now the bills are coming due. Overall, the leading five
- companies invested nearly $50 billion during the past five
- years, much of it in highly automated plants like Nissan's $800
- million "dream factory" in Kanda, which emphasizes flexible
- production, or the ability to assemble different cars on the
- same line. For the moment, these factories represent a largely
- unneeded capacity to make sophisticated cars that are no longer
- selling well. By most estimates, paying off the big bills while
- waiting for a comeback in sales will take several years.
- </p>
- <p> In the meantime, the companies are taking drastic steps to
- cut costs. All have announced sharp reductions in capital
- spending as well as in overtime allocations and the hiring of
- temporary workers. Nissan has gone a step further: it plans to
- shrink its 55,600-member work force by 4,000 through attrition.
- </p>
- <p> The biggest savings will come from trimming back the
- overgrowth of models, variations and options. Mazda, for
- example, has dropped plans to launch a new luxury line, the
- Amati, in the U.S. All the automakers except Honda have
- announced that they will extend the model life cycle from the
- customary four years to save on investment in engineering design
- and manufacturing equipment. The changes are intended to help
- the manufacturers attack the root of runaway expenses: a
- proliferation of auto parts. Mazda intends to reduce its parts
- orders 30% by 1998; among other things, the company hopes to
- reel 58 different seat-belt types back to 10.
- </p>
- <p> Today's buzz word is "commonization," or sharing parts
- among old and new models, even among different carmakers. Honda
- is out in front in that race with its new Domani, a small
- family car that is 60% built with parts also used in other Honda
- models; previously the shared-component segment amounted to 10%
- to 15%. The carmakers are also considering a method already used
- by truck manufacturers: standardization of certain components,
- which allows parts companies to cut their prices. Zexel, a
- major high-tech partsmaker based in Tokyo, expects to get seven
- manufacturers to agree to a common fuel injector for their
- diesel vehicles. The risk of commonization is that if taken too
- far, it could disappoint consumers, who hardly need more
- disincentives to buying.
- </p>
- <p> While the auto companies do penance for past
- overindulgence, few analysts believe the bigger firms have much
- to worry about in the long run. When the dust clears, they will
- still own some of the most modern and flexible production plants
- in the world, not to mention much of the best automotive
- technology. "The Japanese carmakers have serious problems but
- also impressive strengths," says Harley Shaiken, a professor of
- technology at the University of California at San Diego. "They
- are still going to be major innovators. One of their strongest
- attributes has been the ability to rebound."
- </p>
- <p> They should also have new markets to explore in Asia,
- where they are better positioned for expansion than their
- Western competitors. Japanese carmakers are already dueling in
- Thailand, one of the fastest-growing Asian markets, and are
- eagerly awaiting a rise in living standards in other countries
- that should launch a major auto-buying spree. Thailand's market
- may be only a fraction of the size of the U.S.'s, but it offers
- a taste of things to come in some Southeast and West Asian
- countries--and someday China and India. Yasuhara Kondo's
- showroom may not enjoy another boom, but Toyota and its large
- rivals are looking to wider horizons.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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