Mercedes Ireland warns new car market here is dysfunctional

Fake registering, not UK imports, is the greatest threat to the heath of the industry, according to Irish executive

Mercedes Ireland has warned that the Irish car market could be heading for a major financial implosion, and has indirectly criticised its major competitors for fuelling the fires of what could be serious devaluations in the values of used cars.
Mercedes Ireland has warned that the Irish car market could be heading for a major financial implosion, and has indirectly criticised its major competitors for fuelling the fires of what could be serious devaluations in the values of used cars.

Mercedes Ireland has warned that the Irish car market could be heading for a major financial implosion, and has indirectly criticised its major competitors for fuelling the fires of what could be serious devaluations in the values of used cars.

Ciaran Allen is the sales manager of Motor Distributors Limited (MDL), the privately-owned importer for Mercedes-Benz cars in Ireland. MDL was, formerly, a much broader empire with the franchises for Volkswagen, Skoda, Audi, and Mazda but all of these have, in the past two decades, departed to be controlled by their own factory-backed Irish operations.

It is these very manufacturer-controlled operations, claims Allen, that are distorting the Irish new car market, and potentially laying the foundations for a major financial crunch for car buyers.

"If you had asked most people, they would say that the biggest threat to the Irish car market is the Sterling exchange rate, and the level of imported cars" said Allen at a Mercedes event in Wicklow. "We would say that the greatest threat to the industry is actually the levels of pre-registering and hire-drive sales, which are effectively the major factory-backed operations paying their dealers to inflate the market."

READ SOME MORE

Allen pointed to market research carried out by Mercedes which showed that the instances of last-day-of-the-month sales are rising, and making up an ever-growing proportion of total market sales. Last-day sales are often inferred to be pre-registered cars, or cars sold by importers and dealers to themselves in order to inflate sales figures, gain market share, and reach sales figures that generate bonus payments for them.

“We are a private company, and we have to live in the real world” said Mr Allen. “You will not beat the laws of supply and demand, and what you’re looking at are failing businesses - it’s just that they’re kicking the can of that failure down the road.”

Mercedes’ internally-produced numbers point to the percentages of total new car sales being taken up by pre-registered cars and bulk hire-drive sales, which are cars sold at massive discounts to car hire firms. Those figures seem to show that in January of this year, usually seen as the key buying month for new cars in Ireland, as much as 22 per cent of the total sales figure was taken up by sales in the last three days of the month. For February, March, and April, that figure seemed to expand to more than 40 per cent of sales.

PCP risks

If correct, those figures paint a picture of an Irish car industry beset on one side by the rising tide of cheap UK imports, and on the other by dealers and distributors selling cars to themselves to generate volume figures - cars which then have to be sold on at a massive discount, further distorting values. The concern is that the twin effect will put further pressure on used car values, which could present serious problems for those dealers which have guaranteed the future value of cars sold on Personal Contract Purchase, or PCP plans.

“Five years ago, we spoke of a business model built on a house of cards” Mr Allen told The Irish Times. “Now that house is higher, and more unstable. In the financial crash of 2008, people were wondering how someone with a €30,000 salary could get a €3-million mortgage. Well, this time around they’re going to be asking how you can have some car brands registering 600 to 800 cars on the last day of a month’s trading, and that can be considered normal business. This reckless trading is the most consistent threat to the car industry.”

It’s unlikely that a collapse in used car values, which has been predicted for some time, will trigger a general economic downturn. Unlike concerns being raised in the US over multi-trillion dollar debt in the car market, Ireland’s credit-based car sales don’t really have the sheer volume for that kind of effect. Individual buyers will certainly have to take an eventual hit though, as the resale values start to slide, and dealers working on narrow margins may well find the banks from which they have borrowed tapping on the windows if that slide is precipitous.

Global muscle

As for the car companies themselves, the larger manufacturer-backed importers can rely on the global muscle of their parent firms to weather any storms, whereas MDL’s smaller, local structure means that it simply cannot compete with the pre-registering power of the big boys.

That said, Mercedes is currently batting above its weight in Ireland, with Allen claiming that, if you strip out the hire-drive element, the brand is outselling both BMW and Audi, and plans further expansion (and some price cuts) in 2018.

His biggest worry remains the state of the market, however. “If a country has a population of four-million people and a car market of, for argument’s sake, 100,000 and you’re trying to artificially push that volume to 150,000 - well, that can’t go on for ever” said Allen. “When the market is jumping up at rates of 20 per cent or more, then it can absorb that kind of sales dumping. But now we are starting to see those actions coming home to roost.”

Neil Briscoe

Neil Briscoe

Neil Briscoe, a contributor to The Irish Times, specialises in motoring