TOKYO - Thailand's worst floods in decades
may gradually be subsiding but ripples will be felt by companies and consumers
for months to come, analysts say, underlining the fragility of the global
supply chain.
Thailand is a production hub for many firms, and
severe flooding since October has left hundreds dead while hurting a wide range
of industries, particularly the automotive and computer hard-disk drive (HDD)
sectors.
The consequences have been global, hitting
companies such as personal computer maker Dell, HDD makers Toshiba and Western
Digital, and auto giants Toyota and Ford.
As with supply chain woes after Japan's March
earthquake, analysts say the Thai disaster raises questions as to how well
companies understand their supply networks for essential parts, and whether
risks could be better managed.
However, "companies are limited in what
they can do because possessing extra inventory pressures corporate earnings and
can heighten risk," said Masaki Nakamura, analyst at MM Research Institute
in Tokyo.
In particular, the "just-in-time"
delivery system pioneered in Japan and often used in the technology and car
sectors to deliver components and raw materials only when needed is vulnerable
to such shocks.
"While the basic concept behind
'just-in-time' will remain unchanged, firms will now further reduce production
risks" by establishing facilities elsewhere after the floods, said Toru
Nishihama, senior economist at Dai-Ichi Life Research Institute.
Thai factories supply about 40 percent of the
world HDD market and while analysts do not see much of an impact on PC sales in
the Christmas holiday shopping season, conditions will remain tight into 2012.
"During the Christmas season, consumers
may not see too much in terms of price increases for PCs" because
components for those goods were pre-ordered in the previous quarter, IHS
iSuppli analyst Fang Zhang told AFP.
"However, if they need to purchase
external HDDs, they will see a big price increase."
In Tokyo's Akihabara electronics district,
signs can be seen in shops selling HDDs calling on buyers to purchase now to
beat price hikes. Others have stopped selling altogether.
"We can't buy HDD stocks as prices are
four- to five-times higher than normal," said Yu Sugawara, a buyer at
Hamada Electrical Equipment Manufacturer.
"Customers won't buy at higher prices, so
we can't pass on higher costs through retail prices. We've stopped selling hard
disks rather than squeezing our business."
The flooding has made a bad year worse for
Japanese firms that were already fighting to restore output after the March
earthquake and tsunami, and as they grapple with a profit-eroding strong yen.
By late October more than 400 Japanese
companies suspended operations or lowered output due to the Thai floods that
claimed more than 560 lives and damaged millions of homes and livelihoods.
Japan is Thailand's biggest foreign investor.
Its industrial zones and quality infrastructure have attracted Japanese firms
looking to escape higher corporate tax and labour costs.
Nevertheless, Indonesia, Vietnam, and India
look set to receive more investment from Japanese firms than Thailand next year
as companies look to ease production concentration risks, Dai-Ichi's Nishihama
said.
In September Toyota said global motor vehicle
production had recovered to normal after it hired thousands of temporary
workers to make up for lost output following the March quake.
But it was forced to halt its three assembly
plants in Thailand in early October due to the flooding and will not reopen
them until November 21. Toyota and Honda withdrew their annual earnings
forecasts as they assess the damage.
Automakers Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors and
electrical firms Pioneer, Sony, Canon and Nikon were also forced to adjust
global production due to the Thai plant shutdowns and supply woes.
Some companies in the flooded Ayutthaya
industrial zone about 80 kilometres (50 miles) upriver of Bangkok have at least
been able to send in divers to retrieve hardware containing crucial data as
waters there gradually recede.
While limited production has restarted at some
facilities away from the floods, analysts warn the effects of the disaster may
last longer than Japan's earthquake and tsunami.
"Japanese companies could start
restoration about two months after the tsunami," said Nishihama.
"But with facilities still flooded in
Thailand, it is harder to predict when production can return to normal."
AsiaOne
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