Now, microchip shortage threatens auto industry
Skip to main content
Sister Publication Links
  • Automotive News Canada
  • Automotive News Europe
  • Automotive News China
  • Automobilwoche
AN-LOGO-BLUE
Subscribe
  • Subscribe
  • Account
  • login
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • Dealers
    • Automakers & Suppliers
    • News by Brand
    • Cars & Concepts
    • Coronavirus Coverage
    • China
    • Shift
    • Mobility Report
    • Special Reports
    • Digital Edition Archive
    • This Week's Issue
    • CarMax
      CarMax plans bonuses for 22,000 employees to reward pandemic efforts
      COVID-19 vaccines reaching auto plants, but challenges remain
      Working online to book COVID shots, office manager Billie Jean Pellet “typed so fast smoke came off the keyboard,” said dealer Earl Stewart.
      Dealership team hunts for vaccine
      Hope stalls for rebound in European auto sales
    • Sanden's plant in the north China port city of Tianjin
      Hisense to acquire Japanese auto air-conditioner maker Sanden
      A Cadillac XT5 fitted with the 48-volt system 
      Cadillac launches XT5, XT6 fitted with 48-volt system
      Chinese tech companies are turning their sights on EVs
      Telecom firm ZTE preparing electric vehicle product line
      Changan
      Huawei, battered by U.S. sanctions, plans foray into EVs, report says
    • The industry is racing to modernize the way in which EVs are built
      As EV output explodes in China, e-axle drive assembly automates
      Plus to roll big rigs on a ‘continuum' toward self-driving future
      Lidar moves beyond vehicles to underpin a reimagined logistics chain
    • Barra EV
      Automaking is only part of GM CEO's vision
      driverless-vehicle interior
      Consumers fear self-driving future, but like the tech that blazes the path
      The Cruise AV autonomous vehicle, based on the Chevy Bolt
      GM-backed Cruise is in talks to buy startup Voyage, report says
      Fisker's next wave: A premium people's car
    • Elon Musk interview
      Tesla’s Model Y, on sale since March, is a showcase of EV technologies competitors will benchmark.
      Technologies of Electrification
      Cadillac’s Lyriq EV will be unveiled Aug. 6.
      Future Product Pipeline
      A CALL TO ACTION
    • Online trust starts with transparency
      CDK to help dealers with AI data
      Subaru, which had a captive arm in the U.S. in the 1980s, now maintains a captive-type relationship with Chase Auto.
      Money keeps many from the captive game
      Switch to digital brings new challenges
    • Access F&I
    • Fixed Ops Journal
    • Marketing
    • Used Cars
    • Retail Technology
    • Sales
    • Best Practices
    • Dealership Buy/Sell
    • NADA
    • NADA Show
    • Automakers
    • Manufacturing
    • Suppliers
    • Regulations & Safety
    • Executives
    • Talk From The Top
    • Leading Women Network
    • Guide to Economic Development
    • PACE Awards
    • Management Briefing Seminars
    • World Congress
    • Aston Martin
    • BMW
      • Mini
      • Rolls-Royce
    • Daimler
      • Mercedes Benz
      • Smart
    • Ford
      • Lincoln
    • General Motors
      • Buick
      • Cadillac
      • Chevrolet
      • GMC
    • Honda
      • Acura
    • Hyundai
      • Genesis
      • Kia
    • Mazda
    • McLaren
    • Mitsubishi
    • Nissan
      • Infiniti
    • Stellantis
      • Alfa Romeo
      • Citroen
      • Chrysler
      • Dodge
      • Ferrari
      • Fiat
      • Jeep
      • Lancia
      • Maserati
      • Opel
      • Peugeot
      • Ram
      • Vauxhall
    • Renault
    • Subaru
    • Suzuki
    • Tata
      • Jaguar
      • Land Rover
    • Tesla
    • Toyota
      • Lexus
    • Volkswagen
      • Audi
      • Bentley
      • Bugatti
      • Lamborghini
      • Porsche
      • Seat
      • Skoda
    • Volvo
    • (Discontinued Brands)
    • Virtual reveals (Sponsored)
      • MITSUBISHI: 2022 Outlander
      • NISSAN: 2022 Pathfinder and 2022 Frontier
      • GENESIS: 2021 GV80
      • KIA: 2021 K5
      • LEXUS: 2021 IS
      • NISSAN: 2021 Rogue
      • TOYOTA: 2021 Venza and 2021 Sienna
    • Auto Shows
    • Future Product Pipeline
    • Photo Galleries
    • Car Cutaways
    • Design
  • OPINION
    • Blogs
    • Cartoons
    • Keith Crain
    • Automotive Views with Jason Stein
    • Columnists
    • China Commentary
    • Editorials
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Send us a Letter
    • Fisker gets a rare second chance to build his own car company
      The new Stellantis pickup: Schrödinger's Dakota
      Gerry McGovern is right man to steer Jaguar reinvention
      Forget the Ford GT; Moray Callum's biggest hit is the aluminum F-150
    • Record Dealer Profit - Leo Michael
      Record Dealer Profits
      Jaguar is about to undergo its fourth reinvention in five decades as owner Tata Group takes a second crack at shaking up a brand whose glorious past has rarely translated into a profitable present or sustainable future.
      Jaguar Redo, Part IV
      view gallery
      1 photos
      Chip Shortage
      Record Dealer Profits
      view gallery
      10 photos
      Leo Michael Cartoons - Q1 2021
    • Shifting gears away from the stick shift
      SEMA still a wonderful circus
      Penske still has plenty of races to win
      Ford's turn in the hot seat
    • March 2, 2021 | Will EV bets pay off?
      February 23, 2021 | Reliability continues to soar
      February 16, 2021 | Apple looks to take bite out of automotive
      February 9, 2021 | ‘Super’ opportunity for automakers
    • Gilad Komorov
      Automation doesn't mean personalization ends
      Jamie Butters
      EV plans and some damn lies
      Mark Paul
      What dealers can do if D.C. power shift affects recalls
      Reinvention of Jaguar is a tall task for McGovern
    • Geely HQ
      Why Geely wants to be a contract manufacturer
      Shanghai hints at how Chinese cities will pursue electrification
      How Tesla, GM transformed EV market in 2020
      Is sales recovery nearing an end?
    • U.S. Dealership lot
      Lean lots won't last without new dealer discipline
      Taiwan Semicon microchips BB web.jpg
      Chip shortage shows need for new thinking
      Digital demands squeeze smaller auto retailers
      President Joe Biden’s move to electrify all government vehicles could push forward charging infrastructure development.
      Dealers aren't wrong to be wary of EV hype
    • New look at Nissan a positive sign
      Embrace EV ideas at our doorstep
      Buying EV without dealer is just easier
      Dealers are right to worry about EVs
  • DATA CENTER
  • VIDEO
    • AutoNews Now
    • First Shift
    • Special Video Reports
    • Weekend Drive
    • AutoNews Now: Peugeot's U.S. comeback uncertain amid Alfa Romeo appointment
      AutoNews Now: Next parts shortage could be foam for seats
      AutoNews Now: Chip woes persist: GM extending output cuts
      AutoNews Now: Toyota, Mazda, Subaru, Hyundai, Kia slide in Feb.; Volvo, Genesis rise
    • First Shift: Ford criticized by ITC for SK Innovation battery deal
      First Shift: GM, LG Chem mull second U.S. battery plant
      First Shift: Stellantis aims for higher profit margins in 2021
      First Shift: Volvo's electric push includes online-only sales
    • Bert Ogden Auto Group
      How a Texas group is cutting costs, saving millions
      COVID, chips and checks: Sales headwinds and tailwinds for 2021
      N.J. dealer helps position peers for ‘electric revolution’
      DCH Millburn Audi
      'Finding the diamond in the rough': How 2020's No. 1 dealership retains talent
    • Why the pickup is the auto industry's 'battleground'
      Carlos Ghosn's quest to restore his reputation
      Why Ford must execute to avoid 'deep trouble'
      Why Honda is 'locked and loaded' for 2020
  • EVENTS & AWARDS
    • Events
    • Awards
    • Congress Conversations
    • Retail Forum: NADA
    • Canada Congress
    • Europe Congress Conversations
    • Leading Women Conference
    • Fixed Ops Journal Forum
    • ANE Shift
    • Shift: Mobility at a Crossroads
    • Shift: The Future of Mobility (CES)
    • 100 Leading Women
    • 40 Under 40 Retail
    • All-Stars
    • Best Dealerships To Work For
    • PACE Program
    • Rising Stars
    • Europe Rising Stars
  • JOBS
  • AN Solutions
  • +MORE
    • Leading Women Network
    • Podcasts
    • Webinars
    • In the Driver's Seat
    • Publishing Partners
    • Classifieds
    • Companies on the Move
    • People on the Move
    • Newsletters
    • Contact Us
    • Media Kit
    • RSS Feeds
    • Shift: A Podcast About Mobility
    • Special Reports Podcasts
    • Daily Drive Podcasts
    • AAM
    • DealerPolicy
    • Gentex
    • Reputation.com
    • Ricardo
    • Ricardo
    • Allstate: Want more from your F&I?
    • Ally: Navigating the future of automotive retailing
    • Amazon Web Services: Any place, any time, any channel
    • Amazon Web Services: The power of the cloud
    • Amazon Web Services: Universal translator: Harnessing sensor data to build better automotive software
    • Epic Games: Transforming the auto industry with digital assets
    • FTI Consulting: Crisis as a catalyst for change
    • Google: 5 trends shaping the auto industry's approach to a new normal
    • IHS Markit: Automotive loyalty in the wake of the COVID-19 recession
    • IHS Markit: Autonomous vehicles: Automotive and transportation disruption
    • IHS Markit: COVID-19: The future mobility delusion
    • Level5: 2020 Automotive E-Commerce Report
    • Naked Lime: Bring social reputation together as part of big-picture marketing
    • Wells Fargo Auto: Switching gears from LIBOR to SOFR
    • Ally: Do It Right
    • DealerSocket
    • Deloitte: Cyber everywhere: Preparing for automotive safety in the face of cyber threats
    • Facebook: The road to a zero-friction future
    • Guide To Economic Development
    • PayPal Credit: How consumer financing helps drive sales for online auto parts retailers
MENU
Breadcrumb
  1. Home
  2. Manufacturing
December 14, 2020 12:00 AM

Now, chip shortage threatens industry

Hans Greimel
Yang Jian
  • Tweet
  • Share
  • Share
  • Email
  • More
    Print
    Volkswagen, whose plant with SAIC is shown, warned about disruption.

    Like canaries in a coal mine, carmakers and suppliers in China are warning that a shortage of automotive microchips is threatening to slow down the global industry's pandemic recovery.

    The alarm was sounded this month by Volkswagen and German suppliers Bosch and Continental, which cited tightening supplies of semiconductors and said bottlenecks could run into 2021.

    The industry is beginning to brace for impact as microchip prices rise and inventories dwindle.

    Li Shaohua, deputy secretary-general of the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, said last week that auto production in China could take a "relatively big" hit in the first quarter of 2021 as a result.

    Some automotive companies around the world are still recuperating from the hit they took when China's market crashed because of COVID-19 in the first quarter of 2020.

    Still unknown is how bad the chip situation will be or whether the shortage might spread to other markets.

    Automakers in China were the first to feel the pinch partly because the world's biggest auto market is recovering so rapidly from the pandemic — chipmakers simply can't keep up with its rebound. But as North America and Europe bounce back, they may also come under pressure.

    "To be honest, everyone's at risk. It could be global," said one executive at a Western automotive player in Asia who didn't want to be named. "It's more than a minor headache, and it can't be fixed quickly."

    It takes only one missing part, no matter how mundane, to halt production of a vehicle anywhere in the world. The internationally intertwined auto industry learned that the hard way following the 2011 earthquake-tsunami-nuclear meltdown disaster in Japan. Auto output from North America to Nagoya was hammered when a single microcontroller plant in Japan owned by Renesas was knocked offline.

    ‘Delivery bottlenecks'

    But this time, the bottleneck is more a matter of chipmakers not being able to ramp up quickly enough to keep auto plants humming. As the industry pulled away from the pandemic in mid-2020, chipmakers prepared for a more moderate recovery, according to observers in China. Now, with demand jumping ahead of forecasts, chipmakers are finding it tough to dial up production to keep pace.

    China's new-vehicle output started to recover from the pandemic in April and continued to grow for the seventh-straight month in October, advancing 11 percent to exceed 2.55 million vehicles. In the first 10 months of the year, total production was down just 4.6 percent.

    In the first 20 days of November, new-vehicle production in China climbed 9.6 percent to top 1.6 million, according to the manufacturers association. Output of new light vehicles, including sedans, crossovers, SUVs, multipurpose vehicles and minibuses, rose 7.2 percent to nearly 1.4 million in that period.

    As suppliers and automakers scramble to secure microchips to feed the growing vehicle output, automakers could be forced to prioritize production of certain vehicles or trim lines at the expense of others.

    Volkswagen was among those warning the lag could disrupt output.

    "The chip supply for certain automotive electronic components has been affected due to uncertainties caused by the pandemic," VW said in a statement. "This has led to a potential interruption in automotive production, with the situation getting more critical as demand has risen due to the full-speed recovery of the Chinese market."

    Bosch and others echoed the alert, as chipmakers can’t keep up.

    Global parts-making powerhouses Bosch and Continental echoed the alert.

    "Although semiconductor manufacturers have already responded to the unexpected demand with capacity expansions, the required additional volumes will only be available in six to nine months due to the usual lead times in the semiconductor industry," Continental said in a statement. "Therefore, the potential delivery bottlenecks may last into 2021."

    Other automakers said they were aware of tightening supplies and were working with suppliers to stave off any interruptions, even if production had not yet been impacted.

    "We are aware of the increased demand for semiconductor microchips as the auto industry continues its global recovery," General Motors said. "Our supply chain organization is working closely with the supply base to ensure adequate supply and mitigate any potential impacts."

    Nissan, Daimler, Toyota, Ford and Hyundai likewise said they were working to keep production stable.

    "We understand all auto OEMs are currently facing the same issue of potential supply disruptions of select chips for automotive manufacturing," Hyundai said in a statement.

    Multiple causes

    More than a third of automakers and suppliers in China are seeing tight supply of microchips, according to a survey published last week by Gasgoo, an information consultancy in Shanghai covering automotive supply chains and procurement in China. Among the survey's 1,600-plus respondents, 6 percent said chip supplies were disrupted, 6 percent said suppliers were demanding higher prices and 36 percent said they were facing difficulty in replenishing inventories.

    Respondents blamed the shortage on the suspension or interruption of microchip production at overseas plants during the pandemic. According to research reports of two Chinese securities firms, Wanlian and Great Wall, China's auto industry imports 90 percent of its microchips.

    Another factor is that newer vehicles use more chips than older models. Other Gasgoo respondents said the shortage was being caused by the huge growth in demand for automotive microchips as vehicles become increasingly electrified, digital and connected.

    Li, of the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, said the chipmaking industry has been slow to invest in capacity expansion. Coming out of the pandemic, it was especially conservative and is now behind the curve.

    The new wave

    Meanwhile, chipmakers in Europe and Southeast Asia, hit by a second wave of COVID-19 outbreaks, have had to scale back output or suspend operations, Li added.

    "The imbalance between supply and demand of automotive chips is not new, nor is it only reflected in the Chinese auto industry," Li said in an interview published last week in AutoReview, the official publication of the manufacturers association. He said the association expects production in the country to be affected in the first quarter of 2021 but to mostly recover for the full year.

    The key wild card is the COVID-19 pandemic still raging in many parts of the world. A flare-up and new rounds of lockdowns, for instance, could take the edge off global demand and ease pressure on tight supplies. Conversely, resilient auto sales could force a further squeeze.

    While light-vehicle sales in the U.S. slid 18 percent through September, sales were down just 12 percent in China. But for October, China's new-vehicle demand nonetheless rose for a seventh-straight month. Light-vehicle sales rose 9.3 percent, narrowing the year-to-date decline to 9.9 percent.

    RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
    A tale of two earthquakes: In Japan, some lessons learned, others deferred
    Letter
    to the
    Editor

     

     

    Send us a letter

    Have an opinion about this story? Click here to submit a Letter to the Editor, and we may publish it in print.

    Recommended for You
    A tale of two earthquakes: In Japan, some lessons learned, others deferred
    A tale of two earthquakes: In Japan, some lessons learned, others deferred
    Ford plans a small van for Mexico plant
    Ford plans a small van for Mexico plant
    Quake shaped Ford's supplier crisis response
    Sponsored Content: All-new 2021 Toyota Sienna – A behind the scenes look
    Sign up for free newsletters
    EMAIL ADDRESS

    Please enter a valid email address.

    Please enter your email address.

    Please verify captcha.

    Please select at least one newsletter to subscribe.

    See more newsletter options at autonews.com/newsletters.

    You can unsubscribe at any time through links in these emails. For more information, see our Privacy Policy.

    Digital Edition
    Automotive News 3-8-21
    THIS WEEK'S EDITION
    See our archive
    Fixed Ops Journal
    Fixed Ops Journal 2-8-21
    Read the issue
    See our archive
    BREAKING NEWS ALERTS: Sign up and be the first to know when big news breaks.
    AUTOMOTIVE NEWS TV WITH TOM WOROBEC: Sign up for our afternoon newscast and catch up on the top news of the day with our brief video roundup.
    Get Free Newsletters

    Sign up and get the best of Automotive News delivered straight to your email inbox, free of charge. Choose your news – we will deliver.

    Subscribe Today

    Get 24/7 access to in-depth, authoritative coverage of the auto industry from a global team of reporters and editors covering the news that’s vital to your business.

    Subscribe Now
    Connect With Us
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter

    Our mission

    The Automotive News mission is to be the primary source of industry news, data and understanding for the industry's decision-makers interested in North America.

    AN-LOGO-BLUE
    Contact Us

    1155 Gratiot Avenue
    Detroit, Michigan
    48207-2997

    (877) 812-1584

    Email us

    Automotive News
    ISSN 0005-1551 (print)
    ISSN 1557-7686 (online)

    Fixed Ops Journal
    ISSN 2576-1064 (print)
    ISSN 2576-1072 (online)

    Resources
    • About us
    • Contact Us
    • Media Kit
    • Subscribe
    • Manage your account
    • Reprints
    • Ad Choices Ad Choices
    • Sitemap
    Legal
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Privacy Request
    Automotive News
    Copyright © 1996-2021. Crain Communications, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    • HOME
    • NEWS
      • Dealers
        • Access F&I
        • Fixed Ops Journal
        • Marketing
        • Used Cars
        • Retail Technology
        • Sales
        • Best Practices
        • Dealership Buy/Sell
        • NADA
        • NADA Show
      • Automakers & Suppliers
        • Automakers
        • Manufacturing
        • Suppliers
        • Regulations & Safety
        • Executives
        • Talk From The Top
        • Leading Women Network
        • Guide to Economic Development
        • PACE Awards
        • Management Briefing Seminars
        • World Congress
      • News by Brand
        • Aston Martin
        • BMW
          • Mini
          • Rolls-Royce
        • Daimler
          • Mercedes Benz
          • Smart
        • Ford
          • Lincoln
        • General Motors
          • Buick
          • Cadillac
          • Chevrolet
          • GMC
        • Honda
          • Acura
        • Hyundai
          • Genesis
          • Kia
        • Mazda
        • McLaren
        • Mitsubishi
        • Nissan
          • Infiniti
        • Stellantis
          • Alfa Romeo
          • Citroen
          • Chrysler
          • Dodge
          • Ferrari
          • Fiat
          • Jeep
          • Lancia
          • Maserati
          • Opel
          • Peugeot
          • Ram
          • Vauxhall
        • Renault
        • Subaru
        • Suzuki
        • Tata
          • Jaguar
          • Land Rover
        • Tesla
        • Toyota
          • Lexus
        • Volkswagen
          • Audi
          • Bentley
          • Bugatti
          • Lamborghini
          • Porsche
          • Seat
          • Skoda
        • Volvo
        • (Discontinued Brands)
      • Cars & Concepts
        • Virtual reveals (Sponsored)
          • MITSUBISHI: 2022 Outlander
          • NISSAN: 2022 Pathfinder and 2022 Frontier
          • GENESIS: 2021 GV80
          • KIA: 2021 K5
          • LEXUS: 2021 IS
          • NISSAN: 2021 Rogue
          • TOYOTA: 2021 Venza and 2021 Sienna
        • Auto Shows
        • Future Product Pipeline
        • Photo Galleries
        • Car Cutaways
        • Design
      • Coronavirus Coverage
      • China
      • Shift
      • Mobility Report
      • Special Reports
      • Digital Edition Archive
      • This Week's Issue
    • OPINION
      • Blogs
      • Cartoons
      • Keith Crain
      • Automotive Views with Jason Stein
      • Columnists
      • China Commentary
      • Editorials
      • Letters to the Editor
      • Send us a Letter
    • DATA CENTER
    • VIDEO
      • AutoNews Now
      • First Shift
      • Special Video Reports
      • Weekend Drive
    • EVENTS & AWARDS
      • Events
        • Congress Conversations
        • Retail Forum: NADA
        • Canada Congress
        • Europe Congress Conversations
        • Leading Women Conference
        • Fixed Ops Journal Forum
        • ANE Shift
        • Shift: Mobility at a Crossroads
        • Shift: The Future of Mobility (CES)
      • Awards
        • 100 Leading Women
        • 40 Under 40 Retail
        • All-Stars
        • Best Dealerships To Work For
        • PACE Program
        • Rising Stars
        • Europe Rising Stars
    • JOBS
    • AN Solutions
    • +MORE
      • Leading Women Network
      • Podcasts
        • Shift: A Podcast About Mobility
        • Special Reports Podcasts
        • Daily Drive Podcasts
      • Webinars
      • In the Driver's Seat
        • AAM
        • DealerPolicy
        • Gentex
        • Reputation.com
        • Ricardo
        • Ricardo
      • Publishing Partners
        • Allstate: Want more from your F&I?
        • Ally: Navigating the future of automotive retailing
        • Amazon Web Services: Any place, any time, any channel
        • Amazon Web Services: The power of the cloud
        • Amazon Web Services: Universal translator: Harnessing sensor data to build better automotive software
        • Epic Games: Transforming the auto industry with digital assets
        • FTI Consulting: Crisis as a catalyst for change
        • Google: 5 trends shaping the auto industry's approach to a new normal
        • IHS Markit: Automotive loyalty in the wake of the COVID-19 recession
        • IHS Markit: Autonomous vehicles: Automotive and transportation disruption
        • IHS Markit: COVID-19: The future mobility delusion
        • Level5: 2020 Automotive E-Commerce Report
        • Naked Lime: Bring social reputation together as part of big-picture marketing
        • Wells Fargo Auto: Switching gears from LIBOR to SOFR
        • Ally: Do It Right
        • DealerSocket
        • Deloitte: Cyber everywhere: Preparing for automotive safety in the face of cyber threats
        • Facebook: The road to a zero-friction future
        • Guide To Economic Development
        • PayPal Credit: How consumer financing helps drive sales for online auto parts retailers
      • Classifieds
      • Companies on the Move
      • People on the Move
      • Newsletters
      • Contact Us
      • Media Kit
      • RSS Feeds