Toyota and Honda have best supplier relations in US, says study

By REUTERS | 18 May 2015


DETROIT: For the fifth straight year, Toyota and Honda topped a study of automakers with US plants in supplier relations, helping them get the best parts at the lowest cost.

Toyota was the tops in supplier relations, followed closely by Honda. Ford was a distant third, followed by Nissan. General Motors and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV were tied for last place.

Those six are the largest automakers in the US auto sales market and have the largest US auto industry production footprints.

Lagging relations with suppliers means less profit, said the study's author, John Henke, president of Planning Perspectives and a marketing professor at Oakland University near Detroit.

Toyota and Honda improved their scores by an average of 8.7 percent over the year, the study showed.

If the other four had improved their relations by as much they collectively would have added US$2 billion in 2014 operating profit, Henke said.

GM would have earned another US$750 million last year had its supplier relations improved 8.7 percent, the study found.

Suppliers have become more discerning about which companies they serve, said Henke, who has produced a study of relations of automakers and their Tier 1 suppliers for 15 years. A supplier will show its best new technology to the automaker that treats them best, he said.

Gone are the days when parts suppliers would build plants in order to take as much automaker business as they could get.

Suppliers "are not willing to put in the infrastructure to support all the business they could possibly get today because they don't know what's going to happen tomorrow," said Henke.

The 2008-2009 recession "spooked" suppliers away from investing for work that has not been contracted yet, and the best of them became highly efficient, Henke said.

Keywords