Ola Kallenius, CEO of Daimler AG and global president of Mercedes-Benz
Cars, warned at a press conference ahead of the Munich Auto show on
Sunday that the global semiconductor shortage may not disappear
completely next year and may not be resolved until 2023.
"Several
chip suppliers have mentioned structural demand issues," Kalenius said.
"This is likely to continue until 2022, and [the situation] may ease by
2023."
Daimler recently cut its annual sales forecast for its
automotive division, expecting deliveries to be roughly in line with
2020, rather than rising significantly.
Carmakers such as General
Motors of the US, India's Mahindra and Japan's Toyota have cut their
production and sales forecasts due to a shortage of chips, while Asia's
main semiconductor production centres have been slow to recover from the
impact of the pandemic.
This quarter, a considerable number of
factories in Malaysia temporarily closed due to the epidemic control.
Malaysia has become one of the world's major chip testing and packaging
centers in recent years, and Infineon, NXP Semiconductors and ST all
have operational plants in the country, which further increases the
pressure on Daimler to supply semiconductors.
Kalenius said on
Sunday that tight supply and demand for chips could begin to ease in the
fourth quarter of this year, but he expects "structural" demand issues
to affect the industry through 2022. Japanese chipmakers that supply
Toyota also forecast last month that the chip supply crunch could
continue into next year.
Accelerated electrification
It is reported that Mercedes-Benz will show several all-electric cars at the Munich Motor Show.
These
include the EQE, Mercedes-AMG's first all-electric luxury sedan, and a
concept car that showcases Mercedes-Maybach's entry into the era of
electric vehicles. The company will also introduce an all-electric SUV,
the EQB, to the European market.
In July, Daimler said it would
spend more than 40 billion euros ($47.5 billion) by 2030 to compete with
Tesla in the all-electric car market, but warned that the technology
shift would lead to some job cuts.
The German automaker said it
will build eight battery factories in order to boost production of
electric vehicles (EVs). From 2025 onwards, all newly released model
architectures will be pure level stations, and each model will be
available to customers in a pure electric version.
Kalenius also
said Sunday that the company's plan to spin off its truck subsidiary
Daimler Trucks by the end of 2021 remains on track.
Phone