People like to say that the Automotive Industry is a "Capital Intensive" business
But is that in fact the case ?
Let us examine this question using the VW Group's Automotive Business
Its Balance Sheet has €254.1 billion of Assets
1. VW's Automotive Sales Revenues were €184.247 billion in 2020, excluding the Financial Services business
2. To support this, VW had Automotive PP&E in the amount of €62.807 billion, or 34.1% of Automotive Sales
For comparison :
- Tesla has PP&E at 40.4% of Sales across its entire business
- Google has PP&E at 46.4% of Sales across its entire business
As a service business, Google is more capital-intensive by this PP&E measure
3. So how about the amount of Debt that VW Group uses to support all of these PP&E Assets ?
- frankly it is not much : €12.831 billion
- it turns out that factories can and do pay for themselves pretty quickly, as we have seen with Tesla
4. It also takes various kinds of Inventory to run an Automobile Manufacturing business, and VW has €39.1 billion of these or 21.2% of Sales
However, €19.5 billion of this working capital in Inventory is offset by money owed to suppliers as Trade Payables, so the net effect is only €19.6 billion
- Tesla has balanced this even further so that its Inventories are actually LESS THAN its Trade Payables by $2 billion
5. VW also has to fund its Accounts Receivable, which are €17.0 billion or 9.2% of Automotive Sales = 33.6 days of Sales
- this is not so much
- although Tesla is lower with 6.0% of Sales across its entire business
6. Those four items are basically what you need to run an automobile manufacturing company, and frankly they are not so huge relative to the Sales and relative to the Operating Cash Flows which those Sales should generate
- and this says that automobile manufacturing is not necessarily as "Capital Intensive" as it may first appear to be
7. However, these core items do not actually cover all of the items on the VW Group Balance Sheet allocated to their Automobile Business
8. On the Asset side there are two other major items that inflate the VW Group Automotive Balance Sheet :
- Intangible Assets in the amount of €67.8 billion
- Investments in the amount of €25.1 billion
Representing a total €92.9 billion of additional asset capital
9. On the Liability side there are also two major items that inflate the VW Group Automotive Balance Sheet :
- Unfunded Pension Obligations in the amount of €44.2 billion
- Other Liabilities in the amount of €47.1 billion
Representing a total €91.3 billion of Liabilities
10. The largest part of these four items does not relate directly to running an Automobile Manufacturing business with Sales of €184.247 billion
- they are there for other reasons
And their huge scale of ~€90+ billion can give a casual observer a misleading impression of the true capital needed to run such a business
11. As Tesla grows to a similar scale in terms of units and Sales Revenue, it will not need to carry as large of a Balance Sheet in terms of either Assets or Liabilities
- and it will therefore be inherently more capital efficient than the current form of VW Group Automotive
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3. Visualizing a Successful Outcome, they would have held a Competitive Duopoly with all the Advantages which that can be expected to bring
This combination of factors is leading to a broad-based failure of the Japanese Automobile Industry
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What can we learn from this ?
Now consider an alternative scenario where the Japanese Government had instead been inspired to get out ahead of BEV Supply Chain issues during the last two decades, and successfully solve for all of raw material and technology needs of BEVs
According to Colorado Public Radio, the state is considering a "Vehicle Exchange Colorado” program to give participants an instant $6,000 point of sale rebate on a new electric or plug-in hybrid vehicle cleantechnica.com/2023/05/31/col…
Or a $4,000 rebate for a used electric or plug-in hybrid vehicle
"It’s a really exciting new program,” said Carrie Atiyeh, senior program manager at the Colorado Energy Office
"This is something that is going to be new for the state"
To qualify, drivers would need to trade in a conventional car with an internal combustion engine that burns either gasoline or diesel
The vehicle needs to be a model year 2011 or older, or have failed a state vehicle emissions test
How can Apple AAPL shareholders expect to maintain the High P/E of a Growth company in a world where the Company's business has clearly become mature ?
Here is Apple's Press Release on their latest Quarterly Results
"The Company posted quarterly revenue of $94.8 billion, down -3% year over year, and quarterly earnings per diluted share of $1.52, unchanged year over year"
“We generated strong operating cash flow of $28.6 billion while returning over $23 billion… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
“Given our confidence in Apple’s future and the value we see in our stock, our Board has authorized an additional $90 billion for share repurchases"
"We are also raising our quarterly dividend for the eleventh year in a row"
PepsiCo will enter at least one of its Tesla Semis in the Run On Less trucking industry event running for three weeks starting September 11, the company confirmed on Wednesday insideevs.com/news/665498/fi…
The event showcases advances in freight efficiency, and will provide the first independent performance data for Tesla's all-electric Class 8 semi-truck, according to Automotive News
"We're really excited to participate in the run and allow the industry to have access to the insights and the learnings that we are getting from experiencing these vehicles"