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Recaro-triggered Ineos stop exposes fragility of supply chain
Thursday, Sep 26, 2024 12:00 PM
Ineos Grenadier factory Ineos believes it could take until early 2025 to resume full production of its Grenadier 4x4

News that Ineos Automotive has been forced to stop production of the Grenadier off-roader because of a component shortage – understood to be seats from Recaro following its insolvency – underscores the fragility of the automotive supply chain, particularly for smaller car makers.

“Automotive supply chains are always complex and challenging, but this hits at such a busy time for us,” Ineos told Autocar in a statement. “We are leaving no stone unturned in our efforts to get our manufacturing back up and running, to catch up with demand as swiftly as we can.” The company’s “conservative scenario” was to be back at full production by early 2025.

Ineos didn’t officially name the supplier but a regional newspaper near the company’s production site in Hambach, eastern France, quoted plant manager Philippe Steyer as saying it was Recaro’s failure that forced the production stop this week, putting the 700-800 employees at the former Smart facility on short-time work.

The automotive seat manufacturer filed for insolvency in July and its current position is unknown. The company made seats for the more specialist end of the car market and lists among its customers Aston Martin (including for the Valkyrie hypercar) and Ford.

The danger of losing a supplier is ever present for car makers big or small. Often the best thing to do is to keep struggling suppliers afloat either by organising supply chain finance – whereby a specialist bank steps in to provide upfront payment for parts – or even taking over, if they can afford to, said David Bailey, professor of business economics at the Birmingham Business School.

“Bigger firms will have second sourcing strategies so as to have some flexibility over where to source parts from, but Ineos Automotive is a tiny player,” Bailey said. “As a result, it is exposed when a key component maker struggles and may itself not have the resources to mount a rescue takeover.”

The Hambach plant MD said Ineos is evaluating alternative seats from four different companies. However, something as critical to the safety of the occupants such as a seat isn’t easy to replace at short notice. The new seat will have to be homologated, which involves passing safety tests, and then manufactured. Meanwhile, the stoppage will put a strain on existing suppliers, some of whom will be relying heavily on Ineos and the continued production of the Grenadier.

Ineos Grenadier seats

The greatest hope still rests with its original supplier. “Recaro is not off the table for us. It would be the best alternative," Steyer told the Saarbruecker Zeitung. 

The overall Ineos Group head – billionaire Sir Jim Ratcliffe - can afford to buy Recaro outright, but a more practical option might be to team up with other Recaro customers to organise a bailout.

Car makers including JLR were forced to get financially creative back in 2021 to rescue Coventry-based Arlington Automotive Group – a maker of thermostats and other parts. JLR along with other customers approached a former manager to revive the company with the help of aluminium parts specialist Evtec, creating a new division called Evtec Automotive.

Meanwhile last year, General Motors, Stellantis and Yangfeng Interior systems came up with $15 million to prop up US-based automotive die-cut parts maker Unique Fabricating after it ran into financial problems. Eventually, Stellantis and two tier-one suppliers took over the company’s tooling, thereby avoiding expensive production stops.

Car companies have been forced to revaluate their often fiendishly complicated supply chains to try to avoid the consequences of natural disasters, such as tsunamis in Japan and more recently shortages of critical parts such as semiconductors.

The chip crisis was less financially critical in that it affected all car makers, allowing them to push up prices of the reduced numbers of cars they could make. 

Typically, however, a parts shortage affects one or two brands, allowing their competitors to surge ahead. Recent examples include Audi’s inability to build V6- and V8-engined models earlier this year, reportedly due to problems with the Vitesco-supplied 48V mild-hybrid starter-generator. Such is the profitability of those bigger-engined models that the loss of sales resulted in Audi’s normally healthy profit margins falling to just 1.1% in the first quarter of the year. They have since rebounded after a second supplier was engaged.

Meanwhile, JLR and Porsche have both warned of reduced output in the second half of this year after aluminium production from a key supplier was hit by catastrophic flooding in Switzerland  in early July.

Traditional car manufacturers have preferred in recent years to outsource much of the car’s content to suppliers - typically over three-quarters of the total parts - because specialist parts makers can more economically build and innovate in their chosen area. 

However, the transition to electric has triggered a shift to bring more parts manufacturing in-house as car makers look to gain an edge and improve on components that might not be optimised for cars.

US electric vehicle start-up Rivian, for example, builds its own Enduro drive unit, which combines the gearbox, power inverter and motor in one. Even that is not immune, though, given the tiers of suppliers still needed. Currently, a supplier issue is causing a shortage of components – “a situation that continues to fuel internal debate between outsourcing and vertical integration,” according to Jefferies analyst Philippe Houchois, who recently visited the manufacturer.

In 2021, Mercedes-Benz bought out UK electric motor specialist Yasa, preferring to take control of the direction of a company that was innovative but also in the early stages of commercialisation, which is typically seen as bringing risks to its customers. How much risk these early-phase suppliers pose was illustrated by the failure of another innovative British electric motor maker – Saietta – in March.

One of former Ferrari CEO Amadeo Felisa’s first jobs at Aston Martin was to properly dig into the supply chain to make it more shock-resistant. As a result, he cut around 90 suppliers of the original 300. “A lot of them were very small – too small to make strategy or to follow us on efficiency and quality,” he said last year. His replacement, Adrian Hallmark, has spoken in his former role as head of Bentley about the need to bring in more suppliers to the UK with the capability and strength to become partners to the UK’s specialist, luxury-focused automotive industry.

Another option open to Ineos is to carry on building cars and store them at the Hambach site until the seats problem is sorted and they can be fitted retroactively. However, that currently doesn’t seem to be the plan.

A shortage of cars might actually be a help if you’ve got a unique product like the Ineos Grenadier. With fewer cars to sell, they can concentrate on their strategy of pushing up the pricing into a more luxury band. Bailey said: “‘Catch one while you can’ now might have to be the sales pitch from dealers.”

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