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Monday, May 26, 2025

Local motor vehicle industry sees uptick in sales over last year

by

Ambika Jagassarsingh
806 days ago
20230312
Imported cars at the Port Authority carpark on Wrightson Road, Port-of-Spain before Movietowne.

Imported cars at the Port Authority carpark on Wrightson Road, Port-of-Spain before Movietowne.

SHIRLEY BAHADUR

am­bi­ka.ja­gas­sars­ingh@guardian.co.tt

With the on­set of the pan­dem­ic, many in­dus­tries faced a myr­i­ad of un­fore­seen com­pli­ca­tions.

For the au­to­mo­tive in­dus­try, it was the glob­al short­age of se­mi-con­duc­tors which mashed the brake on pro­duc­tion, in­evitably trick­ling down to sales.

Ac­cord­ing to Massy Mo­tor’s vice pres­i­dent of op­er­a­tions, Je­re­my Pagee, the com­pa­ny has ob­served some sale per­for­mance im­prove­ment, how­ev­er, it is still low­er than in pre­vi­ous years.

“The ques­tion is one of de­mand ver­sus sup­ply. While there has been a very mod­est uptick from last year, the re­strict­ed sup­ply hasn’t al­lowed us to meet the po­ten­tial of the de­mand, and the mar­ket is still be­low pre-pan­dem­ic lev­els.”

He stat­ed that these sup­ply is­sues af­fect­ed the man­u­fac­tur­ing of the ve­hi­cles, which capped ve­hi­cle pro­duc­tion since sup­ply is­sues pre­sent­ed a chal­lenge.

“We’re in new ter­ri­to­ry when it comes to the ve­hi­cle mar­ket and sales. On one hand, as we move be­yond the pan­dem­ic, we are see­ing a nat­ur­al re­turn of some de­mand, but most ve­hi­cle man­u­fac­tur­ers and deal­ers are fac­ing sup­ply short­ages both from con­straints on the gen­er­al world­wide sup­ply chain as well as some spe­cif­ic elec­tron­ic com­po­nents re­lat­ed to a short­age of se­mi-con­duc­tors used in their man­u­fac­ture.”

He said these con­straints af­fect­ed the avail­abil­i­ty of cer­tain mod­els of ve­hi­cles.

“Sup­ply has var­ied with the brands and the mod­els be­ing or­dered, with fill rates from man­u­fac­tur­ers as low as 40 per cent of or­ders in some cas­es de­pend­ing on the brand or mod­el.”

He al­so added that the last three months have been par­tic­u­lar­ly chal­leng­ing from a sup­ply side and the com­pa­ny would have seen “a 10-15 per cent re­duc­tion in mar­ket per­for­mance over the last few months.”

While the sup­ply of these ve­hi­cles may be im­pact­ed, there must al­so be some con­sid­er­a­tion giv­en to the em­ploy­ment rate in T&T.

Ac­cord­ing to da­ta ac­quired from the Cen­tral Sta­tis­ti­cal Of­fice’s Labour Force Sur­vey, the pe­ri­od 2021 to 2022 had the high­est rate of un­em­ployed peo­ple in the labour force as com­pared to 2013-2014.

A 2021-2022 sur­vey re­port­ed that al­most 5.24 per cent of the labour force was un­em­ployed.

Due to the chip in­creas­es, they have al­so ex­pe­ri­enced a fluc­tu­a­tion in ve­hi­cle prices, how­ev­er, Pagee stat­ed that they try to ab­sorb costs as much as they can.

“We have cer­tain­ly ex­pe­ri­enced cost in­creas­es, but con­tin­ue to make every ef­fort where pos­si­ble to in­su­late our cus­tomers from the full brunt of those in­creas­es.”

Ac­count­ing for cus­tomers’ small­er bud­gets, the com­pa­ny of­fers a range of ve­hi­cles to match the pock­ets of vary­ing in­come brack­ets across T&T.

“Our most af­ford­able unit is the MG3, start­ing at $175,000 with our most high-end units in the Vol­vo line with prices of well over $1 mil­lion.”

Re­gard­less of the low­er end of ve­hi­cles, how­ev­er, Pagee added that some of their mid-range priced ve­hi­cles re­mained in de­mand.

“Our most pop­u­lar ve­hi­cle re­mains both the Nis­san Fron­tier and the Hyundai Tuc­son, with prices rang­ing from $199,000 to $379,000 or $269,000 to $369,000 re­spec­tive­ly for en­try lev­el all the way to ful­ly loaded mod­els.”

De­spite the al­ready mount­ing costs of ve­hi­cles, Pagee added that cus­tomers were still will­ing to pay ex­tra cash to have ad­di­tion­al ac­ces­sories and fea­tures.

“There are par­tic­u­lar ac­ces­sories that have both a func­tion­al and aes­thet­ic ap­peal, for ex­am­ple, side steps, pick­up bed tray cov­ers and some spe­cialised decks and head units to en­able more func­tion­al­i­ty. These ac­ces­sories and ad­di­tions re­main pop­u­lar with cus­tomers if the ve­hi­cle does not al­ready come sup­plied with them.”

He added that while these ve­hi­cles al­ready come with up­grades, those pur­chas­ing on the high­er spec­trum of price, tend to re­quest cus­tomi­sa­tions.

“Many mod­els now come from the fac­to­ry with up­grad­ed rims etc that the cus­tomers are will­ing to ac­cept, but there con­tin­ue to be re­quests for spe­cif­ic mod­i­fi­ca­tions, es­pe­cial­ly at the ex­clu­sive high­er end of the mar­ket.”

The VP of Op­er­a­tions al­so stat­ed that some of these ve­hi­cle pur­chas­es are not nec­es­sar­i­ly for pri­vate use alone but with­in the busi­ness spheres of some com­pa­nies.

“There has been a steady and con­sis­tent mar­ket de­mand over the last few years for pick­ups/vans. With many sole pro­pri­etors pur­chas­ing these units, very of­ten they are for a dual use for both pri­vate and small busi­ness pur­pos­es. I would say that the di­vi­sion in the mar­ket be­tween raw com­mer­cial use and pri­vate/busi­ness us­age has re­mained the same.”

An­oth­er trend seen in the au­to­mo­tive in­dus­try has been the switch to more sus­tain­able modes of trans­port.

Pagee added that they re­ceived nu­mer­ous in­quiries about hy­brid and elec­tric ve­hi­cle op­tions, which de­pict­ed an in­ter­est and grow­ing de­mand in the ac­qui­si­tion of these ve­hi­cles. A pur­chase they en­cour­aged.

“We are a strong sup­port­er of both hy­brid and elec­tric tech­nol­o­gy as the world tran­si­tions from pure com­bus­tion en­gine plat­forms.”

De­spite hav­ing sim­i­lar chal­lenges of stock avail­abil­i­ty, like the reg­u­lar ve­hi­cles, Massy Mo­tors hopes to im­prove and ex­pand its se­lec­tions.

“While sup­ply chal­lenges have pre­vent­ed us from ful­ly lever­ag­ing all the avail­able op­tions, we are ex­pect­ing to in­tro­duce a num­ber of plat­forms this year which will see on av­er­age a start­ing point of around $300,000.”

He al­so ac­count­ed for its steep­er price points in com­par­i­son to con­ven­tion­al gas en­gines, since they are more com­plex with the ad­di­tion of elec­tric mo­tor(s) and a large bat­tery pack.

“Bear in mind that hy­brid and elec­tric plat­forms are more in­trin­si­cal­ly ex­pen­sive to­day than their pure car­bon coun­ter­parts, and al­so utilise the same com­po­nents that are cur­rent­ly in short sup­ply.”

He stat­ed that these ve­hi­cles were sus­tain­able and more en­vi­ron­men­tal­ly friend­ly, a rev­o­lu­tion for up­com­ing ve­hi­cles.

“They are gen­er­al­ly quite en­joy­able to dri­ve and cer­tain­ly ben­e­fi­cial when you look at the CO2 that is emit­ted dur­ing dri­ving. It is cer­tain­ly the fu­ture.”

De­spite this, he added that mar­ket avail­abil­i­ty, lo­gis­tics and cost may re­strict pur­chas­ing abil­i­ty of these ve­hi­cles for some time.

“But the re­al­i­ty of cur­rent avail­abil­i­ty and ac­qui­si­tion price for many dri­vers means that ex­ist­ing plat­forms around pure com­bus­tion will still be with us for some time to come.”

Busi­ness Guardian al­so reached out to the Pres­i­dent of the Au­to­mo­tive Deal­ers As­so­ci­a­tion of T&T Ryan Latchu, who echoed Pagee’s re­spons­es.

He con­firmed that the Au­to­mo­tive Deal­ers had not­ed “ar­eas of growth and de­cline with­in the au­to­mo­tive in­dus­try in T&T, based on au­to­mo­tive sales, mar­ket trends, cus­tomer in­ter­ests and de­mands.”

He said that while things had slowed down due to COVID-19, sales in­creas­es in 2022 made them hope­ful for the pos­si­bil­i­ties it may bring in 2023.

“As a re­sult of the glob­al pan­dem­ic both lo­cal­ly and in­ter­na­tion­al­ly, new ve­hi­cle sales de­creased year on year from 2019 to 2021, how­ev­er in 2022 we ex­pe­ri­enced a mar­gin­al re­bound which is a pos­i­tive in­di­ca­tor. We an­tic­i­pate sales in 2023 to fur­ther in­crease based on con­sumer de­mand and bet­ter avail­abil­i­ty of prod­ucts.”

The Au­to­mo­tive Deal­ers rep­re­sents sev­en com­pa­nies in­clud­ing, Massy Mo­tors, ANSA Mo­tors, La Fast Mo­tors, Lifestyle Mo­tors, South­ern Sales & Ser­vice Ltd, Ster­ling Ser­vices (Bat­too Bros), Toy­ota T&T Ltd. He stat­ed that across the board, con­sumers pur­chase ve­hi­cles geared to­wards those with mid-range pric­ing.

“The most pop­u­lar seg­ments are mid-sized SU­Vs with Hyundai lead­ing in that area with an av­er­age price of $300,000 close­ly fol­lowed by the pick­up seg­ment with Toy­ota and Nis­san dom­i­nat­ing with av­er­age prices of $325,000 and $328,000 re­spec­tive­ly.”

He added that since the pan­dem­ic, these ve­hi­cles sourced from abroad now have a longer ar­rival time due to sev­er­al im­ped­i­ments.

“Typ­i­cal­ly, new ve­hi­cle im­por­ta­tion takes any­where from four to eight months to ar­rive from the or­der­ing stage, based on the man­u­fac­tur­er’s pro­duc­tion and al­lo­ca­tion ca­pa­bil­i­ties since the pan­dem­ic. Pre-pan­dem­ic, ve­hi­cle im­por­ta­tion av­er­aged 3 to 4 months from or­der con­fir­ma­tion.”

This long wait time may be a dis­suad­ing fac­tor to con­sumers who might have an­tic­i­pat­ed get­ting their ve­hi­cles soon­er.

“This ad­verse­ly im­pacts con­sumers pur­chas­ing pat­terns sim­ply be­cause the sup­ply is heav­i­ly re­strict­ed for the au­tho­rized dis­trib­u­tors and deal­ers there­by, dis­ap­point­ing some con­sumers at times,” he said.

Latchu al­so con­firmed that the Au­to­mo­tive Deal­ers saw a boost in in­ter­est in hy­brid and elec­tric ve­hi­cles.

He al­so stat­ed that these green ma­chines would be the cars of the fu­ture.

“There is a grow­ing mar­ket for sus­tain­able ve­hi­cles and we con­tin­ue to lob­by with the gov­ern­ment to al­low cus­tomers the abil­i­ty to pur­chase hy­brid and elec­tric ve­hi­cles. Sus­tain­able ve­hi­cles are the fu­ture and cus­tomers are in­ter­est­ed in ve­hi­cles that will re­duce emis­sions in the en­vi­ron­ment while re­duc­ing their op­er­at­ing costs.”


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