Ukraine war: Car prices could soar even higher as Russia's invasion worsens supply chain crisis

Car production lines were already hampered by a shortage of semi-conductors and other materials. Now wiring supplies from Ukraine are being hit by the war.
Car production lines were already hampered by a shortage of semi-conductors and other materials. Now wiring supplies from Ukraine are being hit by the war. Copyright Canva
Copyright Canva
By Associated Press
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Just as the car industry hoped to recover from COVID shutdowns and a computer chip shortage, the war in Ukraine is causing a set of new problems.

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BMW has halted production at two German factories. Mercedes is slowing work at its assembly plants. Volkswagen, warning of production stoppages, is looking for alternative sources for parts.

For more than a year, the global auto industry has struggled with a disastrous shortage of computer chips and other vital parts that have shrunk production, slowed deliveries, and sent prices for new and used cars soaring beyond reach for millions of consumers.

Now, a new factor - Russia’s war against Ukraine - has thrown up yet another obstacle. Critically important electrical wiring, made in Ukraine, is suddenly out of reach. With buyer demand high, materials scarce, and the war causing new disruptions, vehicle prices are expected to head even higher well into next year.

The war’s damage to the auto industry has emerged first in Europe. But US production will likely suffer eventually, too, if Russian exports of metals - from palladium for catalytic converters to nickel for electric vehicle batteries - are cut off.

"You only need to miss one part not to be able to make a car," said Mark Wakefield, co-leader of consulting firm Alix Partners’ global automotive unit.

"Any bump in the road becomes either a disruption of production or a vastly unplanned-for cost increase".

Supply chain crisis

Supply problems have bedevilled automakers since the pandemic erupted two years ago, at times shuttering factories and causing vehicle shortages.

The robust recovery that followed the recession caused demand for autos to vastly outstrip supply - a mismatch that sent prices for new and used vehicles skyrocketing well beyond overall high inflation.

In the United States, the average price of a new vehicle is up 13 per cent in the past year, to $45,596 (€41,314), according to Edmunds.com.

Average used prices have surged far more: They’re up 29 per cent to $29,646 (€26,861) as of February.

Before the war, S&P Global Mobility had predicted that global automakers would build 84 million vehicles this year and 91 million next year - by comparison, they built 94 million in 2018.

Now it’s forecasting fewer than 82 million in 2022 and 88 million next year.

Priced out of the auto market

Mark Fulthorpe, an executive director for S&P, is among analysts who think the availability of new vehicles in North America and Europe will remain severely tight - and prices high - well into 2023.

Compounding the problem, buyers who are priced out of the new-vehicle market will intensify the demand for used autos and keep those prices elevated, too - prohibitively so for many households.

Those who have the inclination to buy a new vehicle, they’ll be prepared to pay top dollar.
Mark Fulthorpe
S&P Global Mobility

Eventually, high inflation across the economy - for food, gasoline, rent, and other necessities - will likely leave a vast number of ordinary buyers unable to afford a new or used vehicle.

Demand would then wane. And so, eventually, would prices.

"Until inflationary pressures start to really erode consumer and business capabilities," Fulthorpe said, "it’s probably going to mean that those who have the inclination to buy a new vehicle, they’ll be prepared to pay top dollar".

One factor behind the dimming outlook for production is the shuttering of auto plants in Russia. Last week, French automaker Renault, one of the last automakers that have continued to build in Russia, said it would suspend production in Moscow.

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Patrick Pleul/Pool via AP
Model Y electric vehicles stand on a conveyor belt at the opening of the Tesla factory in Berlin Brandenburg in Gruenheide, Germany, Tuesday, March 22, 2022.Patrick Pleul/Pool via AP

Wiring supply from Ukraine hampered

The transformation of Ukraine into an embattled war zone has hurt, too. Wells Fargo estimates that 10 per cent to 15 per cent of crucial wiring harnesses that supply vehicle production in the vast European Union were made in Ukraine.

In the past decade, automakers and parts companies invested in Ukrainian factories to limit costs and gain proximity to European plants.

The wiring shortage has slowed factories in Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic, and elsewhere, leading S&P to slash its forecast for worldwide auto production by 2.6 million vehicles for both this year and next.

The shortages could reduce exports of German vehicles to the United States and elsewhere.

Wiring harnesses are bundles of wires and connectors that are unique to each model; they can't be easily re-sourced to another parts maker.

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Despite the war, harness makers like Aptiv and Leoni have managed to reopen factories sporadically in Western Ukraine. Still, Joseph Massaro, Aptiv’s chief financial officer, acknowledged that Ukraine "is not open for any type of normal commercial activity".

Aptiv, based in Dublin, is trying to shift production to Poland, Romania, Serbia, and possibly Morocco. But the process will take up to six weeks, leaving some automakers short of parts during that time.

"Long-term," Massaro told analysts, "we’ll have to assess if and when it makes sense to go back to Ukraine".

BMW is trying to coordinate with its Ukrainian suppliers and is casting a wider net for parts. So are Mercedes and Volkswagen.

AP Photo/dapd/ Michael Latz,file
Mercedes stars, are on display at the Daimler-Benz factory in Sindelfingen, southern Germany, Feb. 1, 2011.AP Photo/dapd/ Michael Latz,file

Yet finding alternative supplies may be next to impossible.

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Most parts plants are operating close to capacity, so a new workspace would have to be built. Companies would need months to hire more people and add work shifts.

"The training process to bring up to speed a new workforce - it’s not an overnight thing," Fulthorpe said.

Neon, platinum, and palladium affected

Fulthorpe said he foresees a further tightening supply of materials from both Ukraine and Russia. Ukraine is the world’s largest exporter of neon, a gas used in lasers that etch circuits onto computer chips.

Most chip makers have a six-month supply; late in the year, they could run short. That would worsen the chip shortage, which before the war had been delaying production even more than automakers expected.

Likewise, Russia is a key supplier of raw materials such as platinum and palladium, used in pollution-reducing catalytic converters. Russia also produces 10 per cent of the world’s nickel, an essential ingredient in EV batteries.

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Mineral supplies from Russia haven’t been shut off yet. Recycling might help ease the shortage. Other countries may increase production. And some manufacturers have stockpiled the metals.

But Russia also is a big aluminium producer, and a source of pig iron, which is used to make steel.

Nearly 70 per cent of US pig iron imports come from Russia and Ukraine, Alix Partners says, so steelmakers will need to switch to production from Brazil or use alternative materials.

In the meantime, steel prices have rocketed up from $900 (€816) a ton a few weeks ago to $1,500 (€1,360) now.

Supply chain 'hangovers'

So far, negotiations toward a cease-fire in Ukraine have gone nowhere, and the fighting has raged on. A new virus surge in China could cut into parts supplies, too. Industry analysts say they have no clear idea when parts, raw materials, and auto production will flow normally.

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Even if a deal is negotiated to suspend fighting, sanctions against Russian exports would remain intact until after a final agreement had been reached. Even then, supplies wouldn’t start flowing normally. Fulthorpe said there would be "further hangovers because of disruption that will take place in the widespread supply chains".

Wakefield noted, too, that because of intense pent-up demand for vehicles across the world, even if automakers restore full production, the process of building enough vehicles will be a protracted one.

When might the world produce an ample enough supply of cars and trucks to meet demand and keep prices down? Wakefield doesn’t profess to know.

"We’re in a raising-price environment, a (production)-constrained environment," he said. "That’s a weird thing for the auto industry".

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