MoneyWeek

Speed bumps will not slow the car industry

“Emerging markets will be the main driver of growth in car sales in the future”

Over the past few months, the car industry has “never been far away from the headlines”, says Jon Wallace of the Jupiter Green Investment Trust. The seemingly unstoppable rise of electric cars appears to have hit a speed bump, and governments have rapidly reversed ambitious targets to ban sales of new petrol-powered cars by the end of the decade. Meanwhile, the threat of competition from Chinese carmakers has prompted US president Joe Biden to hike tariffs on electric vehicles from the country. Are these problems just a bump in a road on the way to a new future – or something more serious?

Opportunities in emerging markets

Probably the most immediate challenge facing the industry is the fear that growth in car sales is likely be much slower in 2024 than it was last year, says Ben Laidler of asset manager eToro. But this was always “inevitable” given that global car sales grew 10% in 2023 as consumers returned to the market after postponing purchases due to the supply-chain disruptions of the past few years. Indeed, the absolute volume of cars sold around the world is still set to expand by around 3%, with any short- or-medium-term weakness in developed markets compensated for by stronger growth in emerging markets, “which are set to become the main driver of growth in the future”.

Adrian Lewis, the chief financial officer of Inchcape, has direct experience of the growth in demand in emerging markets as his company works with major carmakers to sell their products to 40 markets in developing and mid-sized economies, outside the major markets of the US, Europe, UK and China. The larger markets, which represent around 20% of the world’s population, currently account for

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from MoneyWeek

MoneyWeek4 min read
The 2020s Will Soon Begin To Roar
Amid all the despondency about the economic prospects of “the West,” it’s refreshing to find an optimist with a coherent argument. Chris Watling of Longview Economics believes that the West is on the threshold of an economic boom.“It is anathema to t
MoneyWeek8 min read
Until The Pips Squeak
The latest polls show Labour on course for such a thumping majority (with less than 50% of the vote – how rubbish is first-past-the-post?) that it will be able to do what it likes. There is scope for a lot of invasive government. Despite Starmer’s pu
MoneyWeek1 min read
IPO Watch
Luxembourg-based private-equity firm CVC Capital Partners is planning an initial public offering (IPO) of Zabka Polska, valuing Poland’s largest convenience-store chain at between $7.5bn and $8bn, says Bloomberg. Zabaka is expected to list in Warsaw

Related Books & Audiobooks