J.D. Power and Associates, one of the few reliable sources on worldwide automotive data, have released their forecast for 2008 auto sales. Executive summary: It won’t be pretty.
All corners of the world will be affected by the slowdown. But not all corners will see equally dismal sales. The mature and saturated markets will be hit hardest by a sudden lack of appetite for new cars. Emerging markets will continue to grow – albeit at a much slower pace.
The Good: China.
The formerly red-hot Chinese light vehicle market (which includes including passenger vehicle and light commercial vehicle segments) is expected to slow in 2008, but it will
still grow at very healthy rates. J.D. Power expects Chinese light vehicle sales to come in at 8.9 million units in 2008, which would be an increase of 9.7 % compared to 2007.
Granted, the number will be much tamer than the 24.1 % growth achieved in 2007. (The Indian light vehicle market will remain in its infancy. 1.8 million units are expected to change hands in 2008, nearly the same as in 2007. Considering that India has approximately the same population as China, 1.8 million units are pretty much a non-event when measured
with a global yardstick.)
The Bad: Europe.
Light-vehicle sales in Europe in Europe as a whole are projected to fall to 21.3 million units in 2008. This would
a mount to a rather tame 3.1 % decline compared to 2007. For Western Europe, where markets are more saturated, J.D. Power forecasts a decline to 15.6 million units sold, which would be 7.5 % less than 2007. Eastern Europe will still see growth. Eastern European unit sales are anticipated to be 5.8 million in 2008, a surprising (giving the circumstances) jump of 11.3 % compared to 2007. However, growth in Eastern Europe is also forecasted to slow significantly.
The Downright Ugly: U.S.
J.D. Power and Associates forecasts total U.S. new light-vehicle sales to plummet to 13.6 million units in 2008, a 16 % decline from the 16.1 million units sold in 2007. For 2009, J.D. Power and Associates sees even lower numbers: 13.2 units. J.D. Power says the numbers may be 200,000 lower, depending on how the 4th quarter of 2008 may play out.
Net/Net.
J.D. Power doesn’t think that the market will recover anytime soon. Jeff Schuster, executive director of automotive forecasting for J.D. Power and Associates, said that “any truly pronounced recovery appears to be more than 18 months away.” And it may get worse before it gets better: “While the global automotive industry is clearly experiencing a slowdown in 2008, the global market in 2009 may experience an outright collapse,” Schuster said. “While mature markets are being impacted more severely than emerging markets, no country or region is completely immune to the turmoil.”
No crisis for after-sales.
.D. Power
observed that “approximately two-thirds of
the decline in retail sales can be
attributed to consumers delaying vehicle
purchases.” People are keeping their
vehicles longer. Keeping their vehicles
longer means more parts and labor are needed
to keep the vehicles running. Buying a new
car or even a used car can be delayed. But
if the brakes fail, it’s either have the
brakes fixed or walk. One of the few recession proof segments in this collapsing economy appear to be parts and services.
China’s auto parts export recession-proof,
rises 34.9%.
Despite the global slowdown, the Chinese
auto parts industry powers ahead. In
the first seven months of 2008, the value of
China's auto-parts exports grew by 34.9%
year on year (y/y) to $8.88 billion,
China’s customs bureau said. From
January to July 2008, China exported $ 8.73
billion worth of auto-parts.
Foreign
invested companies and joint ventures
exported $4.56 billion auto-parts, up 31.6%
y/y, accounting for 51.4% of the total.
The three major destination markets of
China-made auto parts are the U.S., EU and
Japan. Parts for $2.69 billion (+8.8%) were
sold to the U.S.A., parts for $1.6 billion
(+39.2%) were sold to the EU, and parts for
$1 billion (+36.8%) were shipped to Japan. These
three markets contributed 59.6% to the total
value of China's Jan-Jul auto-parts export.
This validates our previous analyses:
1.)
The parts market, especially when targeted
at after sales, is recession-proof.
2.)
After diminishing growth in the U.S.A., more
and more Chinese parts go to Europe. We see an increasing trend amongst Chinese manufacturers
to obtain the necessary ECE (E-Mark)
certification.
3.)
The main drivers of this growth are foreign
companies, who use China as a low cost
production base and sell the product under
their own brand name at high margins.
4.)
With lower raw material prices and lower
shipping costs, we expect further increases,
especially in the after sales segment. The
OEM segment should also grow, because the
world’s auto makers try to off-set their
lower sales by purchasing lower cost parts
in China.
China can't save the world: 2008 new car sales
growth only in the single digits.
When auto sales cratered in the U.S. and
fell dramatically in Europe, automakers
looked to China as their savior. China won’t
cure the world’s ailments.
According to just released figures by the
China Association of Automobile
Manufacturers, passenger vehicle sales
in China fell for a second month in a row in
September, dropping 1.4% from a year earlier
to 552,800 vehicles and heightening worries
about a demand slowdown.
Sales of passenger vehicles in the
January-September period rose a respectable
11.4% to 5.1 million units, however, the
September decline in passenger-vehicle sales
foretells a full-year sales growth in the
single-digits. 2007 saw a rise of
21.8%.
September is usually a strong sales month in China, as consumers
flock to showrooms to buy cars ahead of the Golden
Week holiday in October.
The notable stand-out was Volkswagen AG.
They sold 772,783 vehicles in China from
January to September, a 13% rise compared
to the same period in the prior year. Demand
for Volkswagen's Audi luxury brand bolstered
the parent company's sales. Volkswagen
wants to sell one million units in 2008, an
increase of 9.8% from the 910,491 vehicles
sold in 2007. The reduced domestic demand
for OEM parts is expected to exert
additional pricing pressure on parts
manufacturers.
New car sales crater – independent workshops
rejoice.
US new car sales
dropped to a record low in September 2008.
For the first time in more than 15 years,
monthly U.S. sales fell below the 1 million
mark. Overall industry sales toppled 27% to
964,873 vehicles.
Like the U.S.
auto market, the
European new car market is on track to fall
to its lowest level in more than a decade.
This will be deadly to many new car
dealerships who operate on thin margins.
According to a just published report,
one in five new car dealerships in the U.S.
will fail this year and in 2009.
Many of Europe’s new car dealerships may
suffer the same fate as their US
colleagues. Robert
Rademacher, head of the German trade association
ZDK, said that
“one third of Germany’s dealers operate in
the reds.”
In Europe, the drop of new car sales is expected to be less
dramatic than in the U.S. Analysts
expect western European volumes to decline
5% in 2008 and 3.5% in 2009. Analysts
expect Western Europe
and the US to report
approximately 14 million in new cars sold in
2008, with the outlook flat to lower in 2009.
It may be worse for the U.S.: Katsuaki Watanabe, President
of the world's largest automaker, Toyota,
recently said that U.S. new car sales are
unlikely to reach 14 million in 2008. If his
predictions come true, the U.S. auto market
would, for the first time in history, be
smaller than that of Western Europe.
J.D. Power &
Associates warned that U.S. industry sales
could "collapse" in 2009.
Standard & Poor's
put GM and Ford on credit watch negative
"because of the rapidly weakening state of
most global auto markets" and weak capital
market conditions. Ford and GM promptly
denied that they might consider filing for
bankruptcy.
The downturn is disastrous for people who sell new cars.
It is the chance of a lifetime for people
who fix older cars. All the gloom doesn’t
mean that people do stop driving. People
simply hold on much longer to their cars.
This is aided by cars having an increasingly
longer usable life.
Already,
the average age of all cars on Germany’s
streets is more than 8 years.
10% of Germany’s cars are over 16 years
old. Some observers already talk of a
“Cuba-effect” on Germany’s autobahns, a
tongue-in-cheek reference to the old cars on
Castro’s island.
According to a recent study, the car
park in Europe will rise from currently
approximately 200 million to 275 million in
2025. The study also predicts that the
average age of a car on Europe's streets
will rise to 10.2 years in 2025. In the new
European countries, the average age of the
car is expected to rise to 14 years by 2025.
|
Older
car, higher maintenance |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Maintenance |
Repair |
Total |
|
Less than 2 |
102.00 € |
7.00 € |
109.00 € |
|
2 to 4 years |
276.00 € |
75.00 € |
351.00 € |
|
4 to 6 years |
269.00 € |
166.00 € |
435.00 € |
|
6 to 8 years |
248.00 € |
248.00 € |
496.00 € |
|
8 and over |
186.00 € |
306.00 € |
492.00 € |
|
Annual maintenance and repair
expenditures by age of car. Source:
DAT-Veedol Report 2007 |
|
|
For
the independent workshops and franchised
chains, this is great news. Over the
years, they have gained significant share of
the aftersales market. 58% of Germany’s
cars older than 8 years
are no longer serviced at new car
dealerships, a study says. New car
dealerships are rapidly losing their
profitable aftersales business. As older
cars are subject to more wear and tear,
expenditures for service and repair are much
higher than for new cars (where the big
bills are covered by warranty anyway.)
Nobody spends more for service and repair
than owners of older
cars. According to a recent
DAT-Veedol Report, the annual average
spendings for maintenance and repairs by
German owners of cars that are less than two
years old are EUR 109. Owners of cars older
than 6 years on the other hand spend
approximately EUR 500 per year for
maintenance and repairs.
They may spend more, but they spend it
wisely. Owners of older cars are price
sensitive. The price of the repair bill
should be in line with the value of the car.
The key to unlock this market are high
quality, competitively priced parts.
Wholesalers and service chains are turning
to Sinamotive to source these parts at
competitive prices.
Prices are now more
competitive than ever.
Metal prices, which saw a wild run-up in
the first half of 2008, have been coming down since
July. In October 2008, Aluminum fell to a
31-month trough on the deteriorating
health of the car industry.
Steel prices are
also in decline.
There are
reports of panic selling
as speculative positions are being unwound.
Forbes quoted an analyst who said that
steel prices are "coming down hard and fast"
as the economies of the United States and
Europe deteriorate and growth slows in
China.
Says the Wall Street Journal: "The
upshot is that steel buyers who have seen
prices rise nonstop for nearly two years are
finally getting some relief. As more consumers
hold off on buying new cars, they're making
more repairs."
Rates for container shipping are also
coming down dramatically. "Barely 12 months
ago carriers were making record profits in
the Asia-Europe trade but from summer 2008,
freight rates have plummeted and appear to
still be in decline," said Neil Dekker,
editor of the
Annual Container Market Review and Forecast
2008/2009 for London-based Drewry
Shipping Consultants.
Sinamotive launches private label production
for several European wholesalers.
Sinamotive has signed contracts and letters
of understanding with several large European
wholesalers who use Sinamotive as a
supplier of a range of private label
products. According to these
agreements, Sinamotive supplies brake pads, brake disks,
and other products, which
are certified to be of the same quality as
comparable OEM products. All products come
with a Certificate of OEM Quality
Equivalence, issued by
FAKT GmbH,
an independent, KBA-accredited German
testing lab.
“Auto manufacturers and large system
manufacturers such as Bosch, Teves, ATE, Brembo and more have been successfully
manufacturing in China for years. To a
large degree, they have kept the profits to
themselves,” said Bertel Schmitt, CEO of
Sinamotive. “Now, independent wholesalers
can do the same with the help of
Sinamotive: High quality at high
margins.”
The key to successful manufacturing in China
is tight quality management. “It usually is
a costly mistake to think that one can
simply go to China and buy parts,” said
Schmitt, ”you have to be there, and stay
there, and work with the suppliers.
Inferior quality usually is the fault of a
naive buyer.”
In FAKT, Sinamotive found a partner who’s
expertise is hard to match. “You can’t
monitor the production of brake pads the
same way as panty hoses,” said Xaver
Fackler, CEO of FAKT. FAKT’s team consists
of German testing engineers and specialists
with long experience in brake manufacturing
in Asia.
First product of the private label contracts
is expected to hit the market by Q4 2008.
Read more about private label.
Sinamotive readies over 100 brake disks.
The
renowned German testing and certification
lab FAKT
has concluded an elaborate testing
program that cleared and certified more than
100 brake
disks slated for production and delivery by
Sinamotive. The disks were tested and
certified to meet the stringent requirements
necessary to receive the coveted German
“Allgemeine Betriebserlaubnis (ABE).”
In
Germany, a General Operating License is
required as type-approval to use brake disks
in their intended vehicles. The rest of
Europe does not yet require this type
approval. In Europe, disks that carry German
type approval, or ABE, are generally
regarded as top of the line quality.
The
tests program lasted several months. All
disks entered by Sinamotive passed with
flying colors. “The quality of the disks is
very good,” said Xaver Fackler, CEO of FAKT
GmbH.
FAKT in Germany is generally
acknowledged as the authority for brake
related products. Toyota's Formula 1 team
relies on FAKT for testing of the brakes of
their race cars.
FAKT’s
services for Sinamotive will go far beyond
testing. As Sinamotive’s Quality Assurance
partner, FAKT will accompany the
production of the disks from start to
finish. FAKT issues an OEM Equivalence
Certificate for every disk, certifying that
the product is "Matching Quality"
according to BER 1400/2002.
Sinamotive’s line of over 100 brake disks cover most volume models on Europe’s roads.
The
superior quality disks will be offered at
highly competitive prices.
The parts are
manufactured from high carbon grey cast
iron, generally accepted as the ideal
material for brake disk rotors.
List of current brake disks.
China exports twice as many cars as it
imports.
In case you haven’t noticed: It’s slowly
getting time to take China’s auto exports
seriously. According to statistics released
by the
China Association of Automobile
Manufacturers , China exported twice as
many vehicles in 2007 as were imported
in the same year. In 2007, China exported a
total of 612,700 vehicles, up 78.95 % from a year earlier. In the same period, China
imported 314,200 vehicles, up “only” 37.80
% compared to the previous year.
However, the release of the statistics is
not yet a Maalox moment for executives of
automobile manufacturers in Japan, USA, and
Europe. For one, more than half of the vehicles
exported, 333,300 units, are commercial
vehicles. Last year, China exported a total
of 248,000 heavy duty trucks (40.3 % of
China's vehicle exports.) 22,200 units of
super heavy trucks (total weight over 20
tons) were exported, up an amazing 372.0 %
from the year before.
With a total export of 183,300 units, sedans
made only 30 % of China’s vehicles export in
2007.
Nevertheless, red alert is given each time a Chinese car
shows up at an auto show in Frankfurt,
Geneva, or Detroit.
Weapons of mass destruction are being
deployed to ward off a Chinese invasion:
Chinese cars are being crashed,
sometimes coincidentally timed close to
those auto shows.
Not to worry, the real
thrust of China’s export is aimed elsewhere.
China’s first choice: Russia. Take a look
at
China's top 10
export destination countries for automobile
products in 2007. Exports to
Russia grew at a whopping 250% in 2007.
Russia
is next door to China. Russia’s indigenous
car industry is in bad shape. Even Russia’s
own
Komersant must admit: “The Russian automotive industry is unique. It produces cheap,
obsolete, low-quality products whose export
potential is close to zero.“ And this is
not due to a lack of market potential.
Russia is Europe’s hottest growth market for
cars.
According to a
recent Polk report, Russia
will become Europe's largest market for new
cars by 2010. The market share of the
home-grown Lada has plummeted from 70% in
2002 to 27% in 2007. Appropriating weapons
of the West to ward off a Chinese invasion,
the Russians now also crash Chinese cars,
sometimes with shocking results.
Building parts according to tight specs is
one thing. Engineering a car that is
crashworthy, yet light enough to be
economical, and low on emissions, that is a
complex engineering dilemma,
which can only be solved with the help of
supercomputers.
January strongest car sales month ever in
China.
They cannot quite agree on a number yet, but
one thing is sure: China’s car industry set
off the (Western) new year with a bang.
January sales and production numbers broke
all records. According to
China Economics Net,
Chinese car makers
sold “639,000 passenger vehicles, up 32
percent from the same period in 2007 and 6.7
percent up from December. “ According
to Gasgoo, “China sold a record
amount of 530,700 passenger vehicles in the
first month of this year, which represents a
growth of 3.5 percent month-on-month and a
35.9 percent growth year-on-year.” Both cite
the National Association of Passenger
Vehicles Manufacturers.as a source. Real
numbers are hard to come by in this country,
but usually, the published ones are too low.
Significant aspects:
-
For the first time in recent history,
January sales exceeded preceding December
sales. In China, December usually is one of
the strongest sales months, and the
preceding December had come in particularly
strong.
-
The blizzard that brought China’s South to a
grinding halt for weeks, apparently wasn’t
fierce enough to dissuade Chinese from
buying more new rides than ever.
-
India’s Nano that caused dropped jaws in
the rest of the world, elicited yawns in
China.
According to Forbes, “in the biggest
emerging-car market in the world, China, the
best sellers are cars--real cars--from
Volkswagen, Toyota, and General Motors." Both FAW-Volkswagen and Shanghai Volkswagen are
rebounding strongly and lead the list of the
Top 10 passenger car makers in China,
January 2008.
Senior Chinese government officials now
predict that
China
will replace the United States as the
world's biggest auto producer by 2010.
Previous predictions
had set that date for 2020.
China’s Automotive industry successful in Europe.
China’s automotive industry (reflecting
parts and cars) traditionally exported the
bulk of its wares to the United States and
Japan. In 2007, these markets remained the
top two trading partners. However, European
countries are quickly catching up. Russia
imported 5 times as many parts and
automobiles in 2007 than in the year before.
Germany’s imports rose 58.53%. The imports
to the price sensitive UK market rose a
whopping 87.51% . Market observers see this
trend increasing dramatically in 2008. .
Two driving
factors: The falling $ makes Chinese imports
more expensive in dollar terms. The EURO/RMB
exchange rate on the other hand remains more
or less stable. The US market is heading
into a recession; analysts predict 2008 to
be the worst auto sales year in the US in a
decade. Due to tough certification
standards and demands for high quality, the
European market is a tough nut to crack.
However, once mastered, Europe promises to
be a stable and profitable market, as more
and more and more Chinese manufacturers
already realize. This trend is buoyed by
European automakers who
import more and more parts from China for
domestic production.
European components makers such
as Bosch, ATE, Fichtel Sachs etc. increase
their presence in China.
China's top 10 automotive product export destination countries 2007
|
Rank |
Country |
Total export |
y-o-y change |
|
1. |
United States |
$8.972 billion |
21.98% |
|
2. |
Japan |
$3.635 billion |
24.34% |
|
3. |
Russia |
$1.850 billion |
250% |
|
4. |
Korea , South |
$1.680 billion |
48.16% |
|
5. |
Germany |
$1.204 billion |
58.53% |
|
6. |
Iran |
$1.064 billion |
79.97% |
|
7. |
Neither land |
$1.026 billion |
26.29% |
|
8. |
UK |
$933 million |
87.51% |
|
9. |
Canada |
$885 million |
10.89% |
|
10. |
UAE |
$809 million |
50.20% |
Data source: China Association of Automobile
Manufacturers.
Boston Consulting Group: Markets yet to take
full advantage of cost savings.
According
to a recent study of the Boston Consulting
Group, manufacturers and marketers in
Europe, Japan, and North America have yet to
take “full advantage of potential cost
savings and resources in China and India.”
According to the study, this has
“constrained their efforts to become more
competitive globally.”
Despite significant progress, many are
finding it difficult to capture the full
strategic potential these countries offer.
A host of challenges -- from small R&D
bases and limited sourcing volumes to a lack
of locally adapted production sites -- have
prevented manufacturers from taking full
advantage of China and India. The report's
findings underscore the long road Western
and Japanese OEMs and suppliers must travel
before they can claim to have established
truly localized operations in those
countries.

The substantial savings available by
sourcing from China and India have lured
dozens of multinational OEMs and suppliers
to establish sourcing offices in those
countries. But, on average, China and India
still represent less than 5 percent -- a
tiny fraction -- of those companies' overall
sourcing volumes.
The issue of how successful multinational
OEMs and suppliers have been at embedding
their local operations in China and India is
important, because the stakes are huge. From
2001 through 2007, car sales soared at
dazzling compound annual growth rates: 25
percent in China and 15 percent in India. By
2015 China is expected to represent 17
percent of the global car market (up from 12
percent in 2007) and India, 5 percent (up
from 2.5 percent).
The report notes that some "localization
champions" are successfully pioneering new
approaches to capturing the benefits. One
of the untold localization champions is
Sinamotive. The company,
founded by
experienced European automotive executives
and seasoned US investors,
has been
headquartered from the start in Hong Kong,
and has sister companies in
Beijing, China,
and Hamburg, Germany.
From its very start,
the goal of the company was to realize fully
the resources and cost savings presented by
the fast growing Asian powerhouses.
Sinamotive makes these savings available to
a large number of wholesale partners in
Western Europe, Central Europe, and North
Africa. By embedding German know-how, as
well as German and Chinese certification and quality
assurance partners right from the start into
the value chains connecting Europe’s
wholesalers, workshops, and customers with
the opportunities of China and India,
Sinamotive delivers “German Quality. Made in
China™.”
Center of Quality Supervision and Inspection
of Automobile Parts and Sinamotive to join
ranks.
China’s National Center of Quality Supervision and
Inspection of Automobile Parts and
Sinamotive agreed to join forces in the
production and promotion of OEM-like quality
parts, made in China, and exported to
Europe. Officials of the Center already are
at Sinamotive manufacturers, where they
assist Sinamotive’s European certification
partners in matters of product testing and
Quality Assurance Management.
The Center
plans to conduct a study with the goal of
perfecting the implementation of the already
stringent QA standards for Sinamotive
products. The Center and Sinamotive will
co-operate in developing additional OEM-like
quality product ranges, destined for the
European market.
The National Automobile Parts Quality
Supervision Testing Center is located in
Changchun, China. Most their work is for
China’s large automobile manufacturers. The
Center’s focus is the supervision and
testing of automotive parts. The state-owned
center reports to the China Technology
Supervision Bureau. Their lab is accredited
with the China Center for Automobile
Products (CCAP) and the China Quality
Certification Center (CQC.)
German Quality. Made in
China: Sinamotive and DEKRA show the flag in
Shanghai
At this year's Automechanika, held in
Shanghai from 5th – 7th December 2007,
DEKRA (Shanghai) Co., Ltd. and Sinamotive
made a big splash. Both companies shared
booth 1B29, prominently located between the
joint German exhibit and exhibits of major
Chinese parts manufacturers.
The slogan of the joint
DEKRA/Sinamotive exhibit was "German
Quality. Made in China." This message had
been driven home ever since Sinamotive and
DEKRA had held a joint press conference
during the Shanghai Motorshow in April
2007.
The DEKRA Quality Seal, awarded by DEKRA to
products commissioned by Sinamotive from
Chinese manufacturers, dominated the exhibit.
At a joint presentation during the
Automechanika, executives of both companies
spoke before members of the media (both
Chinese and German,) and representatives of
many manufacturers. Presentations were
given by Guenther Strobel, Managing Director
of DEKRA Shanghai, Prof. Knut Schuettemeyer,
CEO of Sinamotive Germany, and Juergen
Pfennig as representative of the DEKRA
Technology Center in Klettwitz, Germany.

Prof. Schuettemeyer praised the capabilities
of the Chinese industry. In reference to
recent quality scandals, in which
Mattel took the startling step of accepting
the blame, Prof. Schuettemeyer remarked
that all too often, and all over the world, inferior quality is a
result of bad management and lax quality
assurance. "Superior quality is the result
of tight cooperation between importer and
manufacturer, between management and working
staff, and it is a result of the end-to-end
involvement of independent certification
agencies and QA partners, such as DEKRA," Prof. Schuettemeyer
said.
Mr. Pfennig gave an impressive presentation
demonstrating the intricacies of EU product
certification. Understanding and mastering
this complex and ever-changing field is key
to success in the European market.
The exhibit was Sinamotive’s first presence
at a major international trade show. However,
the event was very familiar to some of
Sinamotive’s executives. While Prof.
Schuettemeyer was Director of After Sales
Worldwide at Volkswagen AG, he was
instrumental in the successful launch of
Automechanika Shanghai in 2004. Bertel
Schmitt, CEO of Sinamotive Group (HK)
Limited, had also been present at the
inaugural show in his former capacity as a
consultant to Volkswagen AG. “It was at the
2004 show when the idea to Sinamotive was
conceived,” Mr. Schmitt quipped. “I liked
what I saw in China. So much that I stayed.”
German DEKRA Quality Seal awarded to first
brake pad manufacturer in China.
Hu Zhichao, President Xinyi,
and Bertel Schmitt, CEO Sinamotive, sealing
the deal.
List of current brake pads.
Dongying Xinyi
Automobile Fitting Co., and Sinamotive Group
(HK) Limited are proud to announce a joint
breakthrough in the field of quality
production. For the first time ever in
China, the coveted DEKRA Quality Seal was
awarded to a range of brake pads sourced by
Sinamotive ™, and made by Dongying Xiny
Automobile Fitting Co.
This announcement received wide coverage in
the Chinese press.
According to Bertel Schmitt, CEO of
Sinamotive, “after 4 months of rigorous
testing, DEKRA Quality Seals have been
awarded to
10
brake pads made by Xinyi. All pads submitted
so far passed the stringent test regimen
devised by DEKRA
(Seals for another seven brake pads were
subsequently awarded on December 17th, 2007,
bringing the total to 17.)
In comparison tests with Original Equipment
parts and parts by a leading European
aftermarket manufacturer, Xinyi parts
generally were at par, in some respects they
exceeded the test results of the comparison
products.
On December 3, 2007, mass production of the
E-Mark certified and DEKRA-tested product
began. Both companies expect to ship
approximately 300,000 brake pad sets (1.2
Million brake pads in total) within the next
two months. According to Mr. Schmitt, “this
is just the beginning of a very close and
professional cooperation.” All brake pad
sets are made for the European market and
will be distributed through Europe’s most
prestigious wholesalers, who are eagerly
awaiting product.
In the case of safety
related brake pads, the criteria are extra
stringent. Testing far exceeds the E-Mark
requirements. The whole test program lasted
4 months. Tests were performed using the
latest equipment provided by the Link
Engineering Company. Driving tests were
performed at the DEKRA Technology Center in
Klettwitz, Germany. The DEKRA Technology
Center is situated at the EuroSpeedway
Lausitz, one of Europe’s most advanced
racetracks.
In addition to testing
and certification, DEKRA monitors the
complete process, from supplier evaluation,
pre-production certification to real-time
quality control and pre-shipment sign-off.
“Quality is a matter of management, “said
Berthold Schmitt. “Quality is the
responsibility of manufacturer and purchaser
alike. It’s teamwork. We are proud to have
DEKRA on our team, and we are impressed by
the professionalism of Xinyi.”
About
Xinyi:
Dongying Xinyi Automobile fitting Co., Ltd.,
is currently the biggest OEM supplier of
brake pads in China, Xinyi is OEM supplier
for more than 20 domestic and international
companies with more than 50 types of
vehicles. OEM customers include
Daimler-Chrysler, Ford, Shanghai Volkswagen,
Shanghai GM, Changchun FAW, Tianjin FAW,
NANQI Group, Beijing Auto Group, Xiamen
Jinlong, Zhengzhou Nissan, Hafei Group,
Geely Group, Chery Group, GM Wuling,
Jiangling Motors, JAC, Huatai, Great Wall
Automobile, Changfeng Group and China's
heavy trucks.
Xinyi was awarded
“A” Grade supplier of Volkswagen Group,
Germany. .
The company has
reached major international quality system
certifications, including ISO 9001, VDA6.1,
QS9000, ISO / TS16949: 2002, and ISO 14001:
2004 Environmental Management System
certification. Additionally, the company
currently has more than 200 types of
products approved according to EU ECE R90.
As a leading
company in the Chinese brake pad industry,
Xinyi not only plays an important role in
both domestic OEM and after-market, they
also perform well in North America, South
America, Europe, and Middle East.
Strategic Quality Initiative

DEKRA Seal 550-020072
awarded for warning triangle
TRIO-010001 E11-27R033038.
Members of the Chinese parts
and accessories industry,
the Tongji University
Automotive College,
Sinamotive Group Limited,
and European Certification
Agency DEKRA announced a
strategic quality initiative
to boost automotive parts
and accessories export.
For
the first time ever in
China, the coveted DEKRA
Quality Seal was awarded to
products sourced by
Sinamotive and made by
companies from Ningbo,
Daishan, and Jinhua.
Watch Video Mr. Strobel,
Managing Director DEKRA
(Shanghai) Co. Ltd.
The event made headlines in
China.