Worse
Than The Infamous Lehman September: France’s Private Sector Gets
Kicked Off A Cliff
Wolf
Richter.
27
September, 2012
This
should have been an exciting moment: the Paris auto show, “Mondial
de l’Automobil,” this weekend with over 100 new models from
around the world, from econo-boxes with rounded corners to exotic
prototypes that will never see production. Chicks next to some of
them. Nausea-inducing colors, downsized motors. Something for
everyone. But it had been preceded by two days of supplier events
loaded with the dire verbiage of an industry on a death
march. Particularly in France, whose private sector is veering
into economic fiasco. And on Monday, it became official.
A
barometer of the real economy in France, new car sales as measured by
registrations, crashed in September—down
18.3% from
September last year, and accelerating (year-to-date, sales were down
“only” 13.9%). It was the worst September in years, worse
even than the infamous Lehman September of
2008. And 2012 is shaping up to be the worst year since long before
the financial crisis.
Of
the French brands, market leader PSA Peugeot Citroen saw sales drop
“only” 5%, helped by the introduction of its new sub-compact
Peugeot 208. But year to date, sales were down 18.4%. Renault got
killed. A stunning 33.4% plunge for the month and 19.8% YTD.
An
equal-opportunity fiasco. Even the heroes from across the Rhine got
their clocks cleaned in France. Volkswagen (VW, Audi, SEAT, Skoda)
fell 17.4%. BMW and Mercedes where hit as well. GM (Opel, Chevrolet)
tumbled 20.8%, Ford 31.5%. And Fiat, well, it might as well hang up
its hat: down 38.4%!
In
an ominous sign for the private sector and its investment climate,
light utility vehicles (less than 5 tons) dropped 12.5% for the
month, and “industrial vehicles” (over 5 tons) 20.1%.
“It’s
unclear if automakers can survive without government
help,” lamented VW
CFO Hans Dieter Pötsch. But government help may be hard to come by.
Steeped in the debt crisis, governments are struggling to reduce
their deficits, or at least keep them from ballooning.
Cash-for-clunkers programs, which burned through many billions of
taxpayers euros after the financial crisis, or outright subsidies,
will be a tough sell when pensions, salaries, and social services are
on the chopping block.
French
President François Hollande could only waffle about
supporting the “competitiveness” of the French auto sector. Alas,
on the production side, the sickness goes back years. In 2005, PSA
and Renault together assembled 3.2 million vehicles in France; last
year, it was less than 2 million, and this year will be even
worse.
And
then the second shoe dropped. France’s Manufacturing Purchasing
Managers’ Index (PMI) dove to
42.7 in September, the lowest reading since
April 2009,
during the depth of the financial crisis. Only Greece, which lost a
fifth of its economy over the last five years, was lower, but barely
so. Even
Spain outperformed
France. Export sales skidded, but the worst was in the domestic
market. New orders were particularly hard hit, a harbinger for pain
to come. Lacking new orders, manufactures ate up their backlog at the
fastest rate since
March 2009—when
the economy appeared to have seized.
Lack
of work pushed the PMI employment component down for the seventh
month in a row. Already, with unemployment at 10.6%, youth
unemployment at 25.2%, and rising, and more than 3 million people out
of work for the first time since 1999, heat is building up in the
system.
Lay-offs,
albeit difficult to undertake in France, have been making headlines.
Trophy companies are involved, PSA and Air France-KLM Group, for
example. Hollande himself stepped in to prevent them, or at least to
delay them. Today’s headline hog is ArcelorMittal, largest
steelmaker in the world. It will, despite government machinations,
permanently shut down two idled furnaces. Furious workers instantly
occupied the plant. At least they didn’t take management hostage,
not yet.... [Taking
Bosses Hostage, a Negotiating Tactic in France].
The
largest companies get most of the attention. But the confidence
barometer of
small and medium-sized businesses—the ones that are supposed to
create most of the jobs—crashed in September to 84, the lowest
level ever in
the series, which started in 1992. It was at 129 in April. That’s
what falling off an economic cliff looks like.
The
private sector in France is only 44% of the economy, and shrinking.
56% is public spending, to remain level in the 2013 budget. So a
measure of stability. But to reign in its deficit, the government is
trying to impose a slew of tax increases on the private sector and
households—how exactly that might perk up the private sector
remains a mystery. Fasten your seatbelts.
In
Greece, whose PMI was even worse than France’s, GDP, bad as it is,
no longer does justice to reality. Take new vehicle registrations:
they plunged 46.7% from prior year and 80% from 2008. People have
stopped buying new cars. And not just cars! Read.... Greece,
Tell Brussels “To Take A Hike” And Let The Troika Bail Out The
ECB Instead.
And
here is Switzerland-based George Dorgan wading into a nasty fight
between the Swiss National Bank and Standard and Poor’s.
Read.... Is
Standard And Poor’s A Rating Agency Or A Rumor Agency?
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