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  1. Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Posts
    733
    #1
    T[SIZE=2]he mightly americans are sure in real trouble! Even tiny Suzuki is now entering the fray. How could this be? I'm sure the company's 2006 sales are still minuscule compared to the still s giant Ford! But according to BusinessWeek, Suzuki is showing its might:

    [/SIZE]
    [SIZE=2]Suzuki's Surge Against Giants[/SIZE]

    [SIZE=2] Investment in gas-sippers and emerging markets has pushed Suzuki's market cap within sight of Ford's. Now the Japanese automaker wants to expand in the U.S.[/SIZE]

    Sometimes two simple numbers can illustrate one company's predicament and another's good fortune. Take, for instance, the market capitalizations of Suzuki Motor of Japan and Ford Motor (F) of North America. Suzuki's market cap: $16.2 billion. Ford's: just over $18 billion. In other words, Ford, with 2006 sales of $160 billion, gets roughly the same valuation by investors as Suzuki, a comparative midget at $30 billion in sales. At this point in the story, you would expect an extended passage along the lines of "Oh, how the mighty have fallen." However worn the sentiment, it's valid here: Ford, once the byword for U.S. dominance of the global auto industry, is now a bargain stock, thanks to poor decisions on models, a red-tape management culture, and the crushing burden of pension and health-care costs.
    But maybe the story should be more about Suzuki than Ford. Suzuki, a small and distant competitor to Toyota (TM), Honda (HMC), and Nissan (NSANY), grabbed investors with a contrarian strategy that's a million miles from Detroit.

    Promising a Buildup How's that? Suzuki has caught the wave in two key trends: small cars and emerging markets. Thanks to this twin strategy, the company's stock performance outstrips its larger Japanese rivals, including the mighty Toyota, over the last three years—rising 82%.
    This year, investment bank UBS (UBS) projects the company will increase sales by 11% to $30.4 billion while operating earnings are expected to grow 23% to $1.4 billion. The company aims to raise global production to 3 million vehicles, from 2.4 million, by 2010. Its capital spending, measured as a share of sales, is the highest in the Japanese auto industry. "We will build up our production bases at home and abroad," Suzuki's 77-year-old chairman Osamu Suzuki told Japan's Nihon Keizai business daily in July following the company's quarterly results.
    The septuagenarian chairman is a shrewd leader. Born Osamu Matsuda, Suzuki married the granddaughter of Suzuki's founder, taking her surname and rapidly rising through the ranks at the company. By 1978, he was president and began pursuing strategies that largely avoided head-to-head confrontations with Japanese rivals. "Their strategy was to avoid the markets where Toyota and Honda were strong and concentrate on producing small cars efficiently," says Hirofumi Yokoi, an analyst at CSM Worldwide in Tokyo.


    Big in Emerging Markets
    In Japan, that meant focusing on small passenger cars, including the 660cc mini-car sector, which today accounts for one-third of all cars sold in the country. That helped Suzuki sell just 10,000 fewer cars than larger rival Honda in Japan last year.
    Suzuki's ability to transfer its talent for building small cars to emerging markets has spurred growth, too. In particular, a deal struck with the Indian government in the early 1980s to begin production with Indian automaker Maruti Udyog has been a triumph for Suzuki.
    Despite India's looming large on all major automakers' radars, Maruti's market share in India is still over 40%. About a quarter of Suzuki's global production is made in India. "This is a spectacular combination from the Japanese perspective," says Ramnath Subramaniam, vice-president of research at SSKI Securities in Mumbai.

  2. Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Posts
    22,704
    #2
    No big surprise that Ford's stock is low. All the American automakers are still suffering from problems with the local union and a mismatch between domestic production and market realities.

    But Ford's doing decently, at least. I'm hoping that Allan Mullaly will be able to turn things around in the next three or four years.

    The surprise is Suzuki. Who'da thunk that they would play the small card for such gains?

    Ang pagbalik ng comeback...

  3. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    1,375
    #3
    very nice strategy by the suzuki guys

  4. Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Posts
    675
    #4
    Well, Suzuki is partly owned by General Motors. In fact, Their cars sech as the APV and Swift were actually realizations of GM concept cars presented during Motor Shows.

    Another factor is the cost of fuel. Ford is practically a household name for gas guzzlers. With today's costs of fuel, people will start looking for more practical ways to go around. Even if Ford does change their car's fuel mileages, the perception of them being gas guzzlers will remain for a long time. Suzuki has the opposite story, their cars are perceived to be fuel economizers. So even bigger models such as the Grand Vitara with a V6 engine are still perceived to be more fuel efficient than the Ford's even if there is no actual document/test yet to support that.

    here in the Phlippines though, I've been seeing a more aggressive Suzuki marketing lately. I dont know how their sales are doing though.

  5. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    9,894
    #5
    i just want to point out that we are at risk of taking this article out of context. Suzuki is a conglomerate that produces much more than just cars, while Ford AFAIK only makes money on cars and trucks (and on car loans with FMC). comparing market caps is fair if you're doing a corporate comparison, but not fair if you're talking about market share or profitability in the global car market.

    however, the author does make some good points about Suzuki correctly predicting that small fuel-efficient cars are the wave of the future (it was actually very, very obvious anyway), and profiting greatly from that prediction. i've been to India and Suzuki/Maruti is ubiquitous in that market. a billion people in a market that is quickly growing more affluent

  6. Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Posts
    8,837
    #6
    oo nga may motorsiklo pa suzuki

Suzuki is catching up on Ford?