Toyota, Hyundai and Chinese automakers expected to be hardest hit by Iran war

toyota,-hyundai-and-chinese-automakers-expected-to-be-hardest-hit-by-iran-war

Toyota, Hyundai and Chinese automakers expected to be hardest hit by Iran war

Toyota Motor Corp. Vehicles intended for shipment to Nagoya Port in Tokai, Aichi Prefecture, Japan on Tuesday, April 29, 2025.

Toru Hanai | Bloomberg | Getty Images

DETROIT — Toyota engineHyundai Motor and Chinese automakers such as Chery face the greatest potential impact from foreign automakers in the US-Israeli war against Iranaccording to an analysis by Bernstein.

These international automakers account for about a third of sales in the Middle East, according to the report, led by Toyota with 17%. Hyundai at 10% and Chery at 5%. In Iran specifically, Bernstein reports that Iranian automakers Iran Khodro and SAIPA are in the lead, followed by Chery with a 6% market share.

Other Chinese automakers are also expected to be affected, as the Middle East has become a growing destination for Chinese auto exports. Bernstein, citing Chinese export data, said the region would account for about 17% of China’s passenger vehicle exports in 2025.

The Bernstein report notes that while sales in the region will be affected, the closure of the Strait of Hormuzwhich connects the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and the Indian Ocean, and the rise in oil prices will have repercussions on the entire global automotive industry.

“Closing the Strait of Hormuz adds 10 to 14 days to transit times,” Eunice Lee, an analyst at Bernstein, said in a note to investors on Wednesday, adding that “a prolonged conflict and closure of the strait would hurt sales, increase logistics costs and delay deliveries.”

About 20 million barrels of crude oil pass through the strait every day, according to consultancy AlixPartners. It is also a “critical passage” for shipments of vehicles and parts to the Middle East, Bernstein noted.

Bernstein said any effect on Japanese automakers “appears limited for now, but close monitoring of developments is still necessary.” He also said, regarding European automakers, parent company Chrysler and Jeep Stellar “seems to have the greatest exposure in light of its overall problems.”

“The impact of rising gasoline prices at the pump is already visible in the 11% drop in Stellantis’s share price since its close last Friday – making it such a sharp turn toward gasoline. greedy HEMI V8 engines and canceling its electrification efforts seems particularly inauspicious at this time,” Lee wrote.

U.S. crude oil prices topped $80 a barrel on Thursday, and U.S. retail gasoline prices jumped nearly 27 cents since last week to average $3.25 a gallon, according to motorists group AAA.

Stellantis said this week that it was “closely monitoring developments in the affected countries,” noting that it was “not yet possible to fully assess the potential impact on local operations.”

Toyota, in an emailed statement, said it “does not do business in Iran and has no resident employees there.” The company said it was “closely monitoring the situation and prioritizing the safety of our local resident employees in the Middle East and related parties.”

Hyundai and Chery did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Exit mobile version