in the press

French Translation
Nov 25, 2008
London

CSM Worldwide, the global leader in automotive forecasting and advisory services, expects passenger car and light commercial vehicle sales and production in western Europe to continue to decline well into 2010 as credit remains tight and consumers avoid replacing their vehicles until absolutely necessary. Sales will fall more than 7.7 percent in 2008 and another 12.6 in 2009, while production in the region will fall at similar rates for each year.

Passenger Car Sales
CSM projects that 2008 passenger car sales in western Europe will fall by 1.1 million vehicles, or 7.4 percent, to 13.6 million, compared to 14.7 million in 2007. The sales decline will accelerate in 2009 by 12.4 percent to 12.0 million units.

"European consumers are dealing with a double whammy of tight credit and high inflation," said Walt Madeira, CSM manager of European vehicle sales forecasts. "Banks have stopped lending to lower-income consumers, and even those who qualify for loans find that interest rates are too high. As a result, drivers are putting off buying vehicles. Consumers will need to be lured by attractive financial terms, but those will be difficult to implement due to the ongoing financial crisis. Government incentives will be needed to jump-start vehicle demand."

The largest declines will be in Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom:

  • Spain will continue at very depressed levels, finishing 2008 down 26.6 percent, then moderating somewhat in 2009 but still falling an additional 12.4 percent.
  • In Italy, sales will be off 13.6 percent this year and an additional 12.5 percent in 2009.
  • The UK will finish 2008 down 10 percent and will lose another 16.3 percent next year.
  • Sales for 2008 in Germany will fall slightly to 3 million vehicles, a 1-percent loss, but then decline sharply to 2.8 million in 2009, a drop of 10.2 percent, its lowest sales level since the early 1990s.
  • France is the most stable of the big markets as demand stagnates at 2.0 million in 2008, helped by the government taxation policy which benefits smaller vehicles. But the benefit will be short-term as sales will fall by 10.5 percent in 2009.
  • D-segment (mid-size) cars will see the sharpest overall drop as consumers continue to downsize.
Western Europe Passenger Car Sales
  2007 2008 2009 2008 2009
Total W. Europe   14750903 13663689 11970325 -7.4% -12.4%
Italy   2469197 2133262 1866221 -13.6% -12.5%
Spain   1614737 1184676 1002417 -26.6% -15.4%
UK   2404007 2164796 1811266 -10.0% -16.3%
France   2064539 2074106 1855975 0.5% -10.5%
Germany   3148163 3117192 2799535 -1.0% -10.2%

"We don’t expect credit in Western Europe to loosen up until the second half of 2010 when central bank rates likely will fall below four percent," Madeira added. "Consumers will need to prove they are credit-worthy, and sales will be driven primarily by consumers who can no longer delay replacing their vehicles. Consumer confidence will improve slowly but will remain relatively low."

Commercial Vehicle Sales
Light commercial vehicles will see even more dramatic declines as sales shrink to rates not seen since 1996-97. CSM forecasts declines of 9.7 percent for 2008 and 14.0 percent in 2009. As with cars, the sharpest drops will occur in Italy, Spain and the U.K.

Light Commercial Vehicle Sales < 3.5 ton
  2007 2008 2009 2008 2009
Total W. Europe   2049723 1850322 1591760 -9.7% -14%
Italy   251418 236936 207486 -5.8% -12.4%
Spain   273757 172968 136183 -36.8% -21.3%
UK   338118 296813 230247 -12.2% -22.4%

"Light commercial vehicle sales often are an indicator of overall business sentiment," Madeira noted. "Business demand for vehicle replacement is very closely linked to economic outlook, and the ups and downs usually run parallel to the economy. Commercial vehicle slowdowns normally come before passenger car slowdowns and also recover sooner, so positive growth in commercial vehicle demand likely will signal an uptick in car sales."

Passenger Cars + Light Commercial Vehicles
  2007 2008 2009 2008 2009
Total W. Europe   16800626 15514012 13562085 -7.7% -12.6%
France   2525106 2541265 2276330 0.6% -10.4%
Germany   3369703 3344588 3005909 -0.7% -10.1%
Italy   2720615 2370198 2073707 -12.9% -12.5%
Spain   1888494 1357644 1138600 -28.1% -16.1%
UK   2742125 2461609 2041512 -10.2% -17.1%

Production Outlook
CSM expects light vehicle production in western Europe to fall slightly more sharply than sales in 2008, with production down 8.8 percent. 2009 will see a further decline of 12.4 percent as demand drops in export and emerging markets.

Western Europe Light Vehicle Production
  2007 2008 2009 2008 2009
Passenger Cars   14182982 12889029 11326191 -9.1% -12.1%
Light Commercial Vehicles   1673600 1579869 1349325 5.6% -14.6%
Total W. Europe   15856582 14468898 12675516 -8.8% -12.4%

"After a drop of more than 18 percent in October, production remains down sharply for the fourth quarter," said Mark Fulthorpe, Director of European Vehicle Forecasts. "The slowdown is accelerating in the markets of Western Europe, and the sharp fall in the U.S., coupled with deterioration of the outlook for emerging markets will be a major constraint on exports. The recovery from the expected low-point of 11.3 million units in 2009 will be slow and drawn out as economic activity will improve at very moderate pace across Western Europe. Output levels will begin to rebound in 2010, but because the short-term decline is deep and protracted, the long-term recovery will be slower to materialize."


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