A global shortage of chips that has rattled production lines at car companies and squeezed stockpiles at gadget makers, is now leaving home appliance makers unable to meet demand, according to the president of Whirlpool in China.
The US company, one of the world’s largest white goods firms, is falling behind on exports to Europe and the US from China, by as much as 25% on some months, Jason Ai said in Shanghai.
“It’s a perfect storm,” he said on the sidelines of the Appliance and World Electronics Expo. “On one hand, we have to satisfy domestic demand for appliances. On the other hand, we’re facing an explosion of export orders. As far as chips go, for those of us in China, it was inevitable.”
The company has struggled to secure enough microcontrollers, simple processors that power over half of its products including microwaves, refrigerators and washing machines.
While the chip shortage has affected a range of high-end suppliers like Qualcomm, it originated and remains most severe for mature technologies, for example power management chips used in cars.
Panic buying
The chip shortage, which began in earnest in late December, was caused in part as automakers miscalculated demand and pandemic-fuelled sales of smartphones and laptops surged. It forced car makers including General Motors to cut production, and increased costs for smartphone makers such as Xiaomi.
And with every company that uses chips in its products panic buying to shore up its stockpile, the shortage has blindsided not just Whirlpool but other appliance makers, too.
Hangzhou Robam Appliances, a Chinese white goods maker with over 26 000 employees, had to delay the release of a new high-end stove vent by four months because it couldn’t source enough microcontrollers.
“Most of our products are already optimised for smart-home use, so of course we need a lot of chips,” said Dan Ye, marketing director at Robam. He added that the company had found it easier to source chips from China than overseas, prompting it to re-evaluate future supplies. “The chips we use in our products aren’t the most cutting edge. Domestic chips can satisfy our needs completely.”
Already cutthroat, profit margins at white-goods firms are getting further squeezed due to the shortage.
Robin Rao, planning department director of China’s Sichuan Changhong Electric, said lengthy replacement cycles for appliances, coupled with intense competition and a slowing real estate market, have long kept profit margins thin. “But because of these core components and chips, our supply chain capital costs have increased.”
To deal with the shortage of microprocessors and flash memory chips, Dreame Technology — a vacuum cleaner brand funded by Xiaomi — cut its marketing budget and hired extra staff just to manage relationships with suppliers.
Dreame has also spent “several million yuan” to test chips that could serve as alternatives to the ones it typically uses, said Frank Wang, the company’s marketing director. “We’re working to have deeper control of our suppliers, and have even invested in a few suppliers,” he said. — Reported by Josh Horwitz, (c) 2021 Reuters