Once the envy of the world, Germany’s car brands now weigh heavily on its


Various vehicles and special parts are displayed at Mercedes-Benz Museum, an automobile museum, welcoming its visitors in Stuttgart, Germany on June 28, 2024..

Gokhan Balci | Anadolu | Getty Images

Germany’s car industry was once recognized around the world for its high-quality, innovative combustion engine cars. Owning a German car was a luxury and status symbol. And carmakers were thriving, boosting the country’s economy.

But the picture has since become bleaker.

The latest example are the developments at Volkswagen — which earlier this week said it was no longer able to rule out plant closures in its native Germany and felt it may need to end its employment protection agreement that has been in place in the country since 1994.  

“For German carmakers that were the unchallenged technological market leaders in the sector for close to 140 years and barely had to worry about sales or competition, this is an unfamiliar situation,” Dr. Andreas Ries, global head of automotive at KPMG, told CNBC in translated comments.

Now, the industry is undergoing its biggest transformation yet, he added.

How are German automakers faring?

Sentiment in the automotive industry has been choppy in recent years, historical data from the Ifo institute shows. In August, sentiment pulled back once more to negative 24.7 points, according to data released on Wednesday. Business expectations for the coming six months were “extremely pessimistic,” Ifo said.

Volkswagen is not alone in its struggles.

In the latest set of earnings releases, Mercedes car division cut its annual profit margin forecast, while the BMW’s automotive segment said its profit margin in the second quarter was lower than expected. Porsche cuts its 2024 outlook, albeit attributing that to a shortage of special aluminum alloys.

Issues in the automotive sector may also have spillover effects into the wider German economy, which has been teetering around — and in — recession territory throughout this and last year. In the second quarter of 2024, Germany’s gross domestic product was down 0.1% compared to the previous quarter.

“The statement ‘When the German automotive sector has a cough, Germany has the flu’ … describes the current situation well,” KPMG’s Ries said.

The auto industry doesn’t just include the big players, but thousands of medium, small and tiny businesses across the country, he explained, identifying it is one of the most important industries in the country.

‘We are facing multiple challenges’

A range of factors have led to the current situation and are weighing on the market, experts and industry bodies say.

“We are facing multiple challenges,” a spokesperson for the German Association of the Automotive Industry (VDA) told CNBC. That still includes the aftermath of the Covid-19 pandemic, they said, as well as “geopolitical tensions and high bureaucratic requirements at national and European level.”

Car production has also suffered because of weaker domestic demand, due to the overall state of the…



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