Tesla struggles to gain traction in Japan
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March 03, 2020 12:21 PM

Tesla struggles to gain traction in Japan

CHESTER DAWSON
Bloomberg
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    BLOOMBERG

    For all of Elon Musk’s domination of the burgeoning electric-vehicle business, Tesla Inc. is struggling to get traction in Japan, a market he put on a pedestal early in the automaker’s early days.

    The day after taking the electric-car maker public in June 2010, the first Roadster sports cars shipped to Asia weren’t destined for Shanghai -- they went to Yokohama. Four years later, the CEO handed over the first Model S sedans during a splashy ceremony on the 52nd floor of a Tokyo tower.

    On both occasions, Musk set the bar high, as he is wont to do. He called Japan a natural market for the Roadster, later predicting it would be Tesla’s No. 2 source of sales over time. He said during the Model S event that Tesla looked forward to the country being one of its most important markets in the world.

    But the success that Musk predicted proved elusive. Tesla does not disclose how many vehicles it delivers in the country and is the only company that asks the Japan Automobile Importers Association to withhold publication of its sales figures.

    An industry official with knowledge of the numbers, who asked not to be identified because of their sensitive nature, offered some rough ones: Of the imported electric vehicles bought in Japan last year, roughly 90 percent were Teslas. But this was a towering share of a teeny segment -- the total purchased was just 1,378 units.

    Need a lift?

    To boost those numbers, Musk will have to attract more potential buyers like Takuma Kaneko, a 39-year-old office worker who ventured to Kawasaki, outside Tokyo, in February to visit a Tesla showroom.

    “I like the design. They’re like nothing else available in Japan,” said Kaneko, who currently owns a Lexus NX. While he is considering a Model 3, he’s worried about Tesla’s ability to adequately service vehicles.

    Tesla’s shortcomings in the world’s third-largest auto market have mattered very little to investors. Musk managed just fine last year without much of Japan’s help, boosting global deliveries by 50 percent. But he may need more of a lift to live up to his forecast for Tesla to hand over “comfortably” more than 500,000 cars in 2020.

    Registrations in two key European markets have plunged to start the year, and industrywide sales have plummeted in China due to the coronavirus keeping customers away from showrooms. Representatives for Tesla didn’t respond to requests for comment.

    Revenue from the U.S. fell 15 percent last year, Tesla first annual drop in its home market since 2014. The company plans to boost sales in the U.S. and elsewhere by expanding the lineup with the Model Y crossover. It’s also begun production in China, which will allow the company to lower prices and make its vehicles more accessible to a bigger set of buyers.

    Tesla is far from alone experiencing dark times in the land of the rising sun. Detroit has for decades decried that Japan operates a closed market, though that’s a bit of a misnomer. The country lets autos in tax-free, whereas the U.S. charges tariffs of 2.5 percent for cars and 25 percent for trucks.

    More significant factors behind Tesla’s underwhelming sales include shockingly limited brand recognition and a lack of white-glove treatment that Japanese car buyers are accustomed to.

    Little recognition

    A March 2019 poll of more than 1,000 adults by Nikkei Research found that only half knew of Tesla. Nissan, the Japanese maker of the all-electric Leaf, clocked in at 98 percent.

    “Tesla doesn’t have an established brand identity in Japan. Its cars are seen more as toys than anything else,” said Tatsuo Yoshida, a senior analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence in Tokyo.

    Media attention usually helps, but some local headlines involving Tesla have been unflattering. Musk publicly blamed his longtime battery partner Panasonic Corp. last year for constraining Model 3 production. On Feb. 26, the Japanese company announced it will pull out of a money-losing solar plant the two have been operating in Buffalo, New York.

    Last fall, the mayor of Ichikawa, just outside Tokyo, was forced to return a Model X crossover and cancel plans to lease a Model S sedan for the city after drawing withering criticism for trading in its Toyota Crown hybrid. Constituents objected to taxpayer funds being used on foreign-made luxury vehicles.

    Tesla’s direct-to-consumer business model also doesn’t always translate well in a market where car buyers are accustomed to high-level hospitality. Dealers often provide perks such as complimentary maintenance and free car washes. Some even make regular home visits to check in with loyal clients.

    “Japanese customers don’t buy cars like they do appliances,” BI’s Yoshida said. “The personal relationship with a dealer is really important here.”

    Looking ahead

    The addition of a lower-cost Model 3 -- Japanese deliveries of which began last September -- to Tesla’s local lineup may help spur sales in the country as it has in other markets.

    Tesla also is establishing a beachhead of stores in Japan’s largest cities and building out its charging network. The company now displays its vehicles at four showrooms: two in the Tokyo-Yokohama area and one each in Osaka and Nagoya.

    A more prosaic problem for Tesla is that most Japanese car owners only have one vehicle, given the lack of space for parking; as a result, some consider an exotic electric car to be too risky a purchase.

    “In Japan, most people only have one car, so if you have trouble with it, there’s no spare” in the garage, said Keiichiro Sakurai, a 48-year-old Nissan Leaf owner who works as a solar panel researcher in the Tokyo satellite city of Tsukuba.

    Tesla’s lack of a nationwide service network give him pause. “I wouldn’t buy one,” he said.

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