Michelin announces scale-up of its competitiveness plan

At an Investor and Analyst Day organised held today at the Ladoux Technology Center in France, Michelin announced a scaling up of its competitiveness plan, targeting cost savings of €1.2 billion between 2017 and 2020, or €300 million per year, on the back of expected annual savings of some €200 million to 250 million in the period 2012 to 2016.

Michelin intends to use several levers to achieve a further €500 million to €550 million reduction in overheads:

Given the number of employees nearing retirement, some of whom will not be replaced, training and human resources planning programmes will enable Michelin to offer new career opportunities and re-align skill-sets with its needs.

New business processes and standard information systems continue to be deployed, with the aim of reducing inventories and annual expenses by some €250 million and €200 million respectively by 2020, while also ensuring better customer service.

Lastly, the simplification initiative launched in late 2015 will benefit the Group’s various units as well as its internal organisation, in particular with the broadening of the shared service centres’ responsibilities.

At the same time, the cost of raw materials is expected to decline by between €150 million and €200 million over the same period thanks to the ongoing optimisation of raw material content and the engineering of lighter tyres.

In addition, the programme set up over the past five years to improve manufacturing efficiency will be pursued: Increasing production capacity in Asia, North America and South America; improving capacity utilisation, with plants that produce over 100,000 tonnes a year accounting for a growing proportion of total output; signing contracts in Europe to lock in progress, responsiveness and productivity; capitalising on projects that are designed to boost productivity and empower manufacturing teams; and deploying measures to improve customer service at Michelin plants, a fundamental driver of business growth.

Other levers have also been activated, including a 30 per cent reduction in unit investment costs achieved through efficiency programs, the reorganisation of engineering processes, and systems to independently manage performance and progress. In light of all these measures, Michelin has set a target of reducing production costs by between €450 million and €500 million between 2017 and 2020.

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