Title: Volvo Scania Merger
1Volvo - Scania Merger
October 8, 2003
2Rapidly consolidating truck industry forces Volvo
to react
EU truck producers are under enormous pressure
- ... soaring development cost
- ... incredibly fast, global consolidation of
truck manufacturing industry - dwindling barriers to entry in EU market
-
- Pressure to innovate...
- Incressing MA activity strategic alliances...
- Global convergence of standards
- Fuel efficiency, electronic truck controls
- Regulatory restrictions (e.g. emission limits)
-
- 1996 PACCAR (US) DAF (NL)
- 1998 PACCAR (US) Leyland Trucks (UK)
- 1999 Daimler-Benz (D) Chrysler (US)
- top 4 manufacturers had a combined market share
- of 44 in 1999 (Volvo 5.5, Scania 3.2)
- Global convergence of environmental standards
- manufacturing requirements
- Global players such as can standardize products
-
- Overcapacity in EU market (high fixed cost
industry!)
Economies of scale are vital for Volvo as a
mid-sized player. We must grow through
acquisitions to remain competitive.
3Todays Trucking Business is European or even
Global
The geographical area of concern is the European
Economic Area and not the Nordic
- The European truck market is fragmented and any
potential market power after the merger will not
last for a long time - High levels of truck imports exports
- Between EU member states
- To / from outside the EU
- So plenty of substitutes available to clients
- Main purchasers are price-sensitive private
operators - Little regard to brand
- EU-wide tender purchases
- Suppliers increasingly operate EU-wide
- Reduced dependence on individual truck producers
- Truck producers cannot exercise substantial
market power - EU law enables truck dealers to carry multiple
brands - Prevents exclusive dealerships
4EU Market Share Calculations Overstate the
Volvo-Scania Market Power
EU Commission is wrong to simply add pre-merger
market shares
- The following considerations in fact lead to
lower post-merger market shares - No collusion among truck firms
- Low barriers to entry to our main markets
competitors will aggressively react by increasing
their imports to our main markets - We believe that our competitors will in fact gain
market share in our core markets - If Scania/Volvo was to raise the price in a
market by more than 5, substitution will take
place (e.g. trains, light trucks, imports) - EU allows parallel imports
5If Daimler-Chrysler Acquires Scania, its Market
Dominance will be Worse
6Positive Social Impact from Volvo / Scania Merger
Positive innovation from combined RD gives
social benefits
- Safer trucks
- Less fuel consumption
- Less polluting emissions
- Better environment
- Ultimately, clients and society benefit from
these positive externalities for free
7The Americans are Ready to Buy us
Other considerations the Commission should take
into account
- Potential competition from outside the EU is
large - Volvo Scania will buckle under the pressure if
not allowed to merge - Clearly one of the American players will buy our
companies - If Scania is not bought by Volvo, then
Daimler/Chrysler is likely to take over Scania - In 9 countries this merger will lead to a higher
market share than for the Volvo/Scania merger - Trucking industry will end up like bankrupt
Airline industry - If Commission blocks such mergers, the Eurpoean
truck manufacturers cannot remain competitive - Governmental bail-outs likely in the long-run
(cf. airline industry) - Do you really want to spend tax money to bail-out
our industry? - ... OR ...
- Do you really want to see only American trucks on
our roads?
8In Summary..
The European Commission should not block the
proposed merger
- Relevant market should be at a minimum be the
whole of the European Union and therefore the
proposed merger does not create a dominant
position - The proposed merger will result in safer roads,
protection of the environment and will safeguard
European jobs. - The proposed merger will bring significant
economic benefits to the European Union - The proposed merger will ensure the survival of a
European Truck manufacturer in the global market