anuário abla 2012 (english version)
DESCRIPTION
Anuário da Associação Brasileira de Locadores de Automóveis (ABLA) na versão em inglêsTRANSCRIPT
Job: Fiat-varejo-julho -- Empresa: Leo Burnett -- Arquivo: 25264-004-Fiat-AnAnuarioABLAIngles-210x280_pag001.pdfRegistro: 86099 -- Data: 10:19:33 31/07/2012
1 Yearbook ABLA 2012
TransparencyLoosely speaking, the simplest and most objective words that sum up the meaning of a yearbook are “a portrait of the sector,” because the publication describes what was done in the previous year and makes forecasts for the near future.
Therefore, you have in front of you a compendium of the universe of vehicle rental companies in Brazil, and the sectors that influence this market.
In producing the ABLA Yearbook we are well aware of the responsibility we have for our actions and, above all, a commitment to transparency in its editorial content.
We are happy with the results and the prospects we can envision in the short and medium term, but we cannot hide our concerns about issues that affect the sector.
Rental companies, which create hundreds of thousands of jobs and pay billions of reals in taxes, want to have their claims met so they can grow and offer more than they do now.
This yearbook contains the body and the essence of a sector. Read it and get involved, by sending suggestions to [email protected]
This is how we move towards providing society with the best service possible.
All of the indicators in this edition refer to the base year 2011.
Job: Fiat-varejo-julho -- Empresa: Leo Burnett -- Arquivo: 25264-004-Fiat-AnAnuarioABLAIngles-210x280_pag001.pdfRegistro: 86099 -- Data: 10:19:33 31/07/2012
Editorial
ABLA - Associação Brasileira das Locadoras de Automóveis Rua Estela, 515 Bloco A - 5º Andar | 04011-904 - São Paulo, SP, Brazil | Tel.: 55 11 5087 4100
SAUS Quadra 01, conjunto J, 5º andar, sala 511 Edifício CNT | 70070-010 - Brasília, DF, BrazilTel. + 55 61 3226 2072 | Fax + 55 61 3226 0048
www.abla.com.br
ABLA Yearbook 2012 | General Coordination Cibele Cambuí, Nilvando Filgueira e Jorge Machado | Advertising Cibele Cambuí | Journalist in Charge José Daísio Ferreira (MTb 18790/SP) | Support Marta Pereira | Planning, production, and editorial Ponto & Letra (www.ponto-e-letra.com.br) | Illustrations shutterstock | Institutional images provided by the companies represented | Art Marlos Brasil e Fábio Scorbaioli | Cover Marlos Brasil | Printing and finishing Gráfica Revelação The ABLA Yearbook is not responsible for the opinions expressed in the articles herein. The articles can be reproduced, as long as the source is mentioned.
Management Board SubstitutesPaulo Gaba Jr. (President) Mauro Ribeiro
Paulo Nemer (Vice President) Carlos Adão TeixeiraAlberto Faria da Silva João Carlos de Abreu Silveira
Alberto Vidigal Paulo Miguel Jr.Aleksander Rangel Reynaldo TedescoCarlos Rigolino Jr. Cássio Gilberto LemmertzEmanuel Trigueiro
José Adriano Donzelli Luiz Carlos LangNildo Pedrosa Nelma Cavalcanti
Saulo Froes Eládio PaniáguaSimone Pino Marcelo Fernandes
Valmor Weiss Raimundo Nonato de Castro
Supervisory Board SubstitutesAntonio Pimentel Joades Alves de Souza
Eduardo Corrêa Felix PeterJacqueline Mello Emerson CiottoPaulo Bonilha Jr. José Zuquim Militerno
Ricardo G.E. Santo Alberto Jorge QueirozRodrigo Roriz Marco Antonio de Almeida Lemos
CEOJoão Claudio Bourg
Printed in Brazil, August, 2012
3 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Conte
ntsEditorial 4
a
Statistics 6Business 14Tourism 22Article 24
a
Anfavea 26a
Cesvi 28a
Insurance 32a
Technology 34a
Institutional 38a
Security 42a
Bolivia 44a
The Fleet 46a
SEST/SENAT 48a
Fenaloc 50a
PQA 52a
Article 54a
National board 56a
Supervisory board 58a
Regional Boards 59a
Automakers 66a
Partners 80
4 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Editorial
Entrepreneurshipand Opportunities
Paulo Gaba Jr.President of the National Council - ABLA
The opportunities in Brazil today have awakened the entrepreneurial spirit that had been dormant in Brazilians.The increase in the number of people finishing formal education has led to a change of attitude. The Brazilians who had previously opened by a company because there was no other career option now have the desire and the dream to be entrepreneurs.
The result for our sector, and others, is a flood of new companies being opened every day. Although the number of businesses that have closed in their first two years has declined, those starting out in our business need the correct professional guidance to do well. ABLA’s role is not to discourage new firms from entering the sector to reduce competition, but to guide these entrepreneurs so that the business continues to be seen as promising and professional. So, ABLA’s National Training and Qualification Program (PQA) was fundamental and 2012 will see a new nationwide pricing and costs program.
The false idea of easy and cheap credit for cars certainly prompted some entrepreneurs to venture into vehicle rental, but the access to credit remained troublesome in 2011 because of the international crisis.
Considering that good administration of a vehicle rental business requires strong management, I believe deeply in local and regional entrepreneurs, both with their own brands and as franchisees. Whenever I am asked if I believe in the consolidation of this market in the hands of few companies I reply NO, convinced that, despite there being a worldwide trend to do so in various sectors, it will not apply regionally and in our case. We must not confuse
having a few companies with desks at airports with having a few companies in the sector - they are specific customers and needs and there is room for everyone.
Regional rental companies have grown on average by TWICE the rate of those in large centers, both in fleet size, customers, and revenues, as the business has become more popular. They have also been responsible for the significant and continuous growth in our sector. Whether because of improved infrastructure, or the increasing popularity of the segment, our activity is increasingly a part of Brazilians’ lives.
And 2011 was no different! Despite the external context, the sector’s growth and earnings were above the average for many others sectors, showing that the vehicle rental concept is increasingly important. What is missing? Credit! The role played by the car assemblers’ banks and partner banks will be key in this taking off,as it is worldwide. Globalization has arrived in Brazil and international practices and the global rates are also needed! The flood of new launches from the automakers needs to be tested and here is the best partner!
Is anything else missing? YES - we have stepped up partnerships between automakers and the sector. The vehicle rental sector has a lot of opportunities for automakers, whether new or old, and making use of them reflects directly in increased market share for the automakers. Message received?
Enjoy reading this Yearbook, which translates into figures the action taken and partnerships struck in 2011, with very positive results for the production chain in the sector, in transport, in trade and tourism!
5 Yearbook ABLA 2012
JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DECSELIC rate 0.86% 0.84% 0.92% 0.84% 0.99% 0.96% 0.97% 1.07% 0.94% 0.88% 0.86% 0.91%
Savings 0.6413 1.2168 1.7762 2.4091 2.9591 3.6364 4.2707 4.9208 5.6642 6.2991 6.8968 7.5005Dollar exchange rate in Real (R$) 1.674 1.668 1.659 1.586 1.613 1.587 1.563 1.597 1.749 1.772 1.790 1.836
Trade balance
National savings account interest rate in 2011
Average US dollar commercial exchange rate in 2011
Benchmark interest rate (SELIC) in 2011
Sources: Central Bank, Brazilian tax authority,and Portal Brasil
GDP growth in 2011
US$ 29.790 billion in 2011
7.5%
R$ 1.675
11.62% 2.7%
Economic figures
6 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Statistics
Onward and upward!
Sector revenue
Revenue in the sector increased by 11%
on the yearbefore and directly
impacted the automotive vehicle sector
Anyone wanting to illustrate the rental sector’s performance
in 2011 in graphs will necessarily produce upward curves!From any point of view,
analysts will find satisfying figurescompared with previous periods,
which shows a segment in a continuous process of evolution.
With regard to turnover, forexample, the total of
R$ 5.67 billion was 11% up on 2010.
2004
2.682.91
3.17
3.49
3.99
4.37
5.11
5.67
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
R$ in billions
7 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Statistics
After four consecutive yearsleading sales for the sector, in 2011Volkswagen has been overtaken by Fiat, which became the biggest-selling car makerfor the rental sector in Brazil.The positions in the ranking were reversed,however, the margins separating the twocompanies remained narrow.
New leadership
In 2011 theshare in sales was8.7 %
Others13.10%
Renault5.75%
Ford3.91%
Toyota1.43%
GM18.95%
Fiat29.67%
VW27.19%
ESTaTíSTICa
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Fiat 26.4% 29.3% 30.7% 28.7% 29.48% 27.32% 27.91% 29.67%
Volkswagen 33.3% 32.6% 30.7% 31.1% 30.91% 29.52% 29.53% 27.19%
GM 30.2% 30.1% 30.1% 32.8% 29.61% 23.74% 24.54% 18.95%
Renault - - - - 1.83% 3.54% 2.49% 5.75%
Ford - - - - - 3.92% 2.49% 3.91%
Toyota - 2.8% 2.9% 2.7% 1.16% 1.03% <1% 1.43%
Others 10.1% 5.2% 5.6% 4.7% 7.01% 10.93% 13.05% 13.10%
Share in sales for the automotive sector
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
11.3% 11.05% 11.09%
8.22%
11.4%
9.02%9.40%
8.70%
8 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Statistics
High speedfleet renewal
Historically the renewal of the fleet of Brazilian rental cars is a dynamic process and the vehicles are maintained at an acceptable standard.
However, vehicle rental companies have boosted the pace of investment to matching supply to the demand generated by millions of tourists who will come to the country as of next year for the Confederations Cup. Even more people are expected for the FIFA World Cup in 2014 and for the Olympics in 2016.
The renewal of the fleet will include technological updates. The first involves a
larger percentage of cars with automatic transmissions,which are preferred by tourists from developed countries. Two other new developments will stem from national legislation, which makes dual air bags and ABS brakes mandatory for all vehicles produced in Brazil (or imported) as of January 1 2014.
ABLA estimates that in the next two years alone companies will invest R$ 18 billion in renewal and expansion of the fleet.
Existing rental companies
2004
1,985 1,964 1,9521,905 1,893
1,955
2,008 2,083
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Rental offices
9 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Statistics
The sector’s fleet
From 2010 to 2011the fleet grew by 7.51%
The average age of
the fleet
Make-up of the fleet by modelCompact cars are the most sought-after for rental
In months
(In percentages)
In units
2004
15 1514
1516
16,5
15
17
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
203,650 223,811250,204
283,562318,865
363,456414,340
445,470 445,470
Compact Medium Luxury SUVs and vans
2011 64.0 16.0 5.0 15.0
2010 60.0 17.0 7.0 16.0
2009 66.0 14.0 6.0 14.0
2008 71.0 13.0 6.0 10.0
2007 72.0 12.0 6.0 10.0
2006 70.8 12.9 5.9 10.4
2005 71.1 12.6 6.1 10.2
2004 70.4 12.9 5.9 10.8
10 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Statistics
Social responsibilityThe vehicle rental sector fulfills its social role, creating
jobs and generating income for society, besides being one of the leading payers of direct and indirect taxes to every sphere of government.
In the labor area, for example, in 2011 the companies in the sector created 277,943 direct and indirect jobs, up by 5% on 2010.
11 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Statistics
Profile of the business
Tax contribution
Creation of direct and indirect jobsNumber of people
R$ in billions
2011
2010
20062007
2009
2005
2008
2004
20%
55%
25%20%
29%27% 27%
22%27%
27%
24%
17%18% 18%
26% 18%
16%
56%
54%55% 55%
52% 55%
57%
Tourism(Leisure)
Outsourcing
Tourism(Business)
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
0.79 0.87 0.941.06
1.271.44
1.69
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
168,200 178,240 185,560 194,838209,061
240,644264,708 277,943
1.86
12 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Statistics
Customer profile The social and economic transformations that have taken
place in Brazilin the last decade have impacted the vehicle rental segment.
During this period changes have taken place in both the number of people using the service users and their profiles.
In 2011, Brazil had 18.6 million people renting vehicles and 2,083 rental companies. Men made up the majority of customers, accounting for 79% of the total.
With regard to marital status, 65% of those using the service were married.
The majority of users - 85% - were aged between 25 and 45 years of age. Second ranked were, at 10%, were people aged 46 and above.
Regarding educational levels, most customers were people with degrees or above, at 85%.
By job category, those who made most used of the service last year were in services, accounting for 40% of the total. Just behind came those in industry, at 30%, commerce, at 12%, professionals, at 10%, and other sectors at 8%.
79% men 21% women
65% married 35% single
Number of customers(in millions)
2011 18.62010 17.72009 16.82008 16.22007 15.12006 14.12005 12.2
Rental offices
Nort
h
Acre 8
Amapá 28
Amazonas 22
Pará 56
Rondônia 10
Roraima 19
Tocantins 14
Total 157
Nort
heas
t
Alagoas 37
Bahia 189
Ceará 92
Maranhão 38
Paraíba 39
Pernambuco 85
Piauí 17
Rio Grande do Norte 80
Sergipe 30
Total 607C
entr
al
Wes
t
Distrito Federal 57
Goiás 45
Mato Grosso do Sul 23
Mato Grosso 15
Total 140
South
eas
t Espírito Santo 108Minas Gerais 225Rio de Janeiro 125Greater São Paulo 216São Paulo State (not including Greater São Paulo) 161
Total 835
South Paraná 121
Rio Grande do Sul 126
Santa Catarina 97
Total 344Grand total 2,083
Sex
Marital status
13 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Statistics
Customers’ professional fields in 2011
Most vehicle renters work in the service
sector or industry
average age of customers in 2011
Educational level in 2011
In percentage
5% 85% 10%
aged between21 and 24
are 45 or above are aged from 25 to 45
85% 15%
high school graduates
Graduates
810
12
30
40
Professionals
Services Commerce
Other
Industry
14 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Business
The vehicle rental sector has grown by double digits in recent years.
According to statistics from the Brazilian Association of Vehicle Rental Companies (ABLA) the sector ended 2011 with 2,083 rental offices,a fleet of 445,470 vehicles, and 277,943 people in direct and indirect jobs. These are significant figures and strong evidence of growth in the short term. Staying in this market and - better still - growing, calls for effective management.
As it is a service segment, dealing direct with the end customer, the front-line professionals are the ones who are contacted most, and so represent the business. For Ivan Carlos Witt, president and partner of Steer Human Resources, professionals should be trained as if they were users of the service, so they can understand the needs of consumers, understand the culture they come from and, in addition to speaking the same language in figurative terms, they must really speak the same language.
“These professionals must be motivated constantly to greet the customers with a smile, to be polite and able to to offer fast, effective solutions.”
In addition to knowing everything about the vehicle, front-line professionals need to know their customers so they can be assertive, winning over and retaining the customer. “In a competitive market the service makes all the difference. So, professionals who work immediately with customers need continuous training and incentives, including financial ones, in the form of bonuses or profit sharing,” says Witt.
From reception onward, there is no secret, according to the consultant. Processes have to be automated as much as possible, providing a fleet of new and modern vehicles, and new areas of activity have to be explored. “The rental company is a shop window for the automakers. They can build the desire to buy the model that is being rented.”
Fast pace
15 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Business
Anticipating the customer’s needs and satisfying them must be part of the professionals’ routines to retain customers and attract new ones. According to ABLAS’s regional director in São Paulo, Eládio Paniágua, training must be continuous. With increasing demand from foreigners, the main focus has been on English and Spanish courses, with a view to the 2014 FIFA World Cup and the 2016 Olympic Games.
Knowing all about the vehicles is the main priority. It is therefore important to strengthen partnerships with dealers and automakers. “Whenever there is a launch, we organize workshops to learn all about the newmodel,” says Paniágua.
Paulo Nemer, vice president of ABLA’s National Council, stresses the importance of both professional training and knowledge of the fleet, which must be constantly recycled.
With over thirty years on the market,the executive is continually investing in training of
the team, especially those working in reception. “We have to be able to convince customers that the most important thing is the use of the vehicle and not ownership, especially among firms,”he says, referring mainly to fleet outsourcing. “It is a niche that has lots of space to grow in. As in any area that is expanding, we must innovate, retaining customers and building relationships with them, with partners, employees and suppliers.”
With three decades’ experience in the rental market, Saulo Tomaz Froes, a member of the ABLA board, is also backing outsourcing, which today accounts for 60% of his business. “It’s a mistake to believe that the segment’s success is related to low prices. We must invest in the infrastructure of the offices, in the fleet, in training and in market research to understand the customers’ needs and prospect more effectively and profitably,” says Froes.
He adds that before winning over and retaining consumers, however, employees have to be won over. “Training and recognition are the key words. Business ethics works from the inside out,” he says.
For Alberto de Camargo Vidigal, another member of the ABLA board, and president of Sindiloc São Paulo, the FIFA World Cup and the Olympics will certainly guarantee growth in the sector. However, leisure tourism still has a long way to go in Brazil and is one of the niches to be exploited. “Worldwide, it accounts for 10% of GDP. In Brazil, it is only 3%, “says Vidigal.
And to make the most of all the opportunities ever-more professionalism is called for. “The market doesn’t accept cowboys. Excellence in customer service, with personalized solutions, a quality fleet, streamlined administration with less bureaucracy and continuous improvement are just some of the requirements for those who plan to ride the economic wave in Brazil,” he says.
16 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Business
When we talk about major, global sporting events in Brazil, and the demand they can generate for the vehicle rental sector, we all naturally think of and get ready for the FIFA World Cup in 2014 and the 2016 Olympics.
However, another important event is scheduled for before these two major events and could take a lot of people by surprise. It is the Confederations Cup, beginning on June 15, 2013.
This tournament is also organized by FIFA and it will bring together teams from Europe, Africa, Asia and America, in eight Brazilian cities. During the event, which runs until June 30, the teams will travel around a few states and regions, and they will be followed by the supporters.
There is not long to go. Some airports might have finished their refurbishment work. This raises the possibility of more vehicle rentals.
However, some issues have yet to be resolved. Will we be ready to serve thousands of fans, officials and journalists from around the world? How many months will we need to get our companies structured? Will we have people who are qualified to talk to tourists in two or three languages? And will there be enough vehicles to meet demand?
Opportunity prior to the
FIFa World Cup
The event will last only 15 days. However, just as the Confederations Cup has been a test for FIFA to check on the readiness of countries who are hosting the World Cup, a year before it is held, for rental companies it has become a business opportunity and a training exercise for the much larger demand to come.
Anyone who wants to take part in this “game,” in this real race against time, must prepare their teams. Intensive language courses, planning procurement, training staff, and promotion to potential customers should start as soon as possible.
Some consequences of the investment stimulus
In April Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff announced a new package of measures that are part of the Greater Brazil Plan to increase the country’s competitiveness. The measures include the transfer of taxes on payroll to revenue in 15 sectors. This includes sectors such as textiles, footwear and leather, apparel, plastics, furniture, electrical material, buses, autoparts, airplanes, ships, capital goods, mechanical parts, catering and information technology, among others.
by João Claudio BourgCEO
17 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Business
The consequences of the package of measures for the vehicle rental sector are indirect, and more than ever vehicle rental companies need special attention from Brazil’s state-owned development bank, BNDES, to leverage the necessary investment and so prepare this sphere of the transport sector.
The Ministry of Finance estimates that the tax break constitutes a waiver of R$ 7.2 billion, with R$ 4.9 billion in 2012 alone. This is money that will no longer be paid by companies to Brasilia. That is, it is money that could and should be reinvested in the business to capitalize companies. It is, then, possible to forecast that some of these resources may be directed to the vehicle rental business, expanding the market for companies. As for private individuals, the package of measures was a clear sign of the government’s position in relation to the international crisis that has rocked Europe and the United States. That is to say, Brazil will not face the crisis at the expense of Brazilian jobs. The country needs a balanced and solid market to guarantee jobs and maintain consumption.
As employment and income increase, so does demand in tourism and leisure, so opening
up the way for the car rental business. In addition, the Greater Brazil Plan goes
furtherthan tax relief. President Rousseff has announced the creation of 19 Competitiveness Councils, whose mission is to propose actions to stimulate the production sector. The Councils will be made up of representatives of the government, business, and workers, and will discuss issues by sector.
The first results should be more evident in the second half of 2012, but they already show that the government has acted appropriately. They are important measures in order that we can step up our competitiveness as a whole, and also competitiveness among vehicle rental companies in particular.
In 2008 Brazil had indicated that it is alert to the movements of the international market and it has taken steps accordingly since then. Now, again, the measures announced by the Federal Government are highly likely to work and keep the country on track for development, guaranteeing jobs, generating and distributing income. It is our sector’s responsibility to be prepared to take on the demands that lie ahead.
18 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Business
Who’s going to pay the bill? The technology used in manufacturing
automobiles has undoubtedly contributed over the years to an increase in road safety, aiming, ultimately, to reduce the number of accident victims and, above all, deaths.
ABLA has always been clear: it supports every measure designed to reduce accidents, as well as measures to protect drivers, passengers, and pedestrians.
The mandatory requirement that ABS brakes and double air bags be installed in automobiles as of 2014 is one example. This is a resolution from the National Transport Council (CONTRAN) which is commendable from the safety standpoint, as ABS brakes are proven to prevent accidents, and air bags help minimize injuries in accidents.
Hence, we do not agree that the bill should
be paid in full by consumers,it being that a mandatory requirement for such equipment will result in significant automobile price rises.
In the case of vehicle rental companies,any price increase has consequences that multiply exponentially. We refer here to entire fleets of vehicles, for which the cost of renewal is even more expensive when compared with private individuals who have only one, two or three vehicles.
For the companies in our sector ,a vehicle is a tool of their trade. Any price increase makes it more difficult to renew the fleet and, by extension, requires further credit.
Thus, we believe that the automakers who want to act responsibly will have to take action in order not to penalize customers. There are things that cannot be put off any longer in order to ensure that prices remain competitive for everyone, including vehicle rental companies, who are now the main customers for automakers in Brazil.
It is a challenge that, in our understanding, is not really complicated. The mandatory requirement established by CONTRAN will mean the manufacture of safety devices gains scale, and hence their prices should fall.
However, it would be unwise to rely on scale alone. To introduce new technology to cars, without a high transfer of cost to prices, automakers will also need to refine their negotiations with suppliers and also scratch the word “greed” from their dictionaries. Just remember that today manufacturers charge an average of R$ 5,000 for ABS brakes and dual air bags in models, and the actual cost of this equipment does not even reach R$ 1,000 and it will be further reduced by economies of scale when the new regulations enter force.
So we are not opposed to the application of technology or its mandatory requirement, but rather we are in favor of the obvious: that the bill be shared between the various parties involved in the chain, otherwise the principle that gave rise to the requirement for ABS brakes and dual air bags, namely the reduction of accidents and their consequences, will be totally forgotten.
A
20 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Business
Vehicles rental for social class CThe benefits reaped by social class C through
increased access to employment and credit in recent years help to explain the growth in the consumption of tourism-related products and services. Given this, our sector also faces the challenge of serving customers who are only just getting to know the benefits of vehicle rental.
This social group currently represents more than 50% of the population and is the largest consumer among the social classes, according to data published by the Getúlio Vargas Foundation (FGV) based on census data from 2009. In the last eight years the new middle class, or emerging class, has increased consumption eight-fold.
These consumers do not see spending on tourism as superfluous, but as a factor for inclusion. These expenses are seen by the class as an investment.
Dealing with consumers in class C requires preparation on the part of agencies and companies in the tourism chain,including vehicle rental companies. It is a huge mass of consumers who have become the largest consumer group in many segments. This means that our sector also needs to understand that we are now dealing with different customers from those who supported the vehicle rental ten years ago. To serve this demand we face the challenge of not only finding new products and services, but also finding the correct way to serve people. For this new market it is very important to be clear and straightforward in communications.
It must be remembered, for example, that in the coming years many new customers in the rental market will, for example, never have traveled by plane. Class C has its own aspirations and does not seek simply to repeat the buying pattern set by the higher classes.
Understanding differences will be critical to the creation of effective strategies to attract this market to our sector. We must avoid a mismatch between what these new consumers think and the strategies adopted by rental companies. Price is not always the most important factor in choosing a product. Research among Class C consumers has found that 44% said that quality is more important than price, for instance. It is something to think about.
What is certain is that consumption of new products and services by the rising middle class is expected to expand into such areas as dining out, leisure and travel. With improved standards of living, families first bought basic items, such as appliances. Now, besides looking for other goods and services, they also want to improve the quality of the items they used to consume. And that also means travelling much more from now on. Serving them with the right price and quality is a challenge that we will surely be able to overcome.
21 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Business
Trackers in vehicles:safety or invasion?
In accordance with resolution 245 issued by The National Traffic Council (CONTRAN), as of 2012 vehicles sold domestically, be they domestic or imported, must have a factory-fitted anti-theft device installed. This applies to all types of vehicles, such ascars, commercial vehicles, trucks, buses, motorcycles, trikes, and even quads.
Starting on January 15, 20% of vehicles must leave the factory with a tracker. The goal was to reach 100% of all domestic production by August 2012. Along the year the changes must be made gradually. The deadline is extended for mopeds, scooters, motorcycles,trikes and quads, which have until January 2013 to reach 100% of production.
The measure has its benefits and, we understand, will help reduce theft and make it easier to recover lost vehicles. One of the immediate advantages is that rental companies will not have to modify vehicles to install the
products - meaning they will not risk their warranties. It will be up to the owner to activate, or not, the device installed in the factory.
For our sector, alternatives need to be considered so the equipment can be used as an option: the device will only be activated if the customer has prior knowledge and consents.
The fact is that the law is designed to increase motorists’ safety and reduce theft, problems that directly affect our sector.
The resolution represents a challenges in terms of implementation because of problems in preparing the infrastructure to operate the Automatic Integrated Vehicle Monitoring and Logging System.
Approved by the National Traffic Department (DENATRAN), manufacturers of tracking systems will be the official providers of tracking services for recently-manufactured vehicles.
Besides being a conventional anti-theft device, the system may also be used to block the vehicle, which is an item also provided in the resolution by CONTRAN. Vehicles leaving the factory without meeting the standard will not be registered or licensed.
The issue seems controversial because it involves security and privacy. Regarding privacy, we must remember that we are now monitored wherever we go. This is a simple fact. When leaving home, many of us get into an elevator with cameras in it, and when leaving the garage there is another camera, and during our trip there are more cameras. Our emails are monitored, as are our credit card purchases. Using mobile telephony antennas it is possible to obtain a mobile phone’s location, and that of the user. There are endless ways in which we are under surveillance.
With all these applications involving tracking technology, it is difficult to imaginea place where we are not monitored. So, tracking a vehicle is not a matter of not respecting privacy, but rather one of safety. Our understanding is that it is an issue about educating customers, because the decision to use the device results in a benefit for the rental companies in terms of asset security. However, undoubtedly the biggest benefit will be to the users, in terms of their own security.
22 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Tourism
Gastão VieiraMinister of Tourism
Tourism scored record after record in 2011. Domestic arrivals (79 million) were up by 15.8% on the year before. This is the latest record in a series that started in 2003. A similar leap (13.9%) can be seen in international travel, which rose from 7.9 million to 9 million people between 2010 and 2011.
The figures show that government policy is on track. Moreover, they show that coordination between the Ministry of Tourism and the many different players in the sector has had the desired effect. Local governments, partners in the federal government sphere and in the production sector have aligned to multiply the economic and social gains for Brazil.
Joint action has secured growth in the sector even amid the unfavorable international scenario. Research commissioned by the Tourism Ministry and done by the Getúlio Vargas Foundation reveals that revenue in 2011 was beyond the expectations of the business.The study of the 80 largest tourism companies, which accounted for sales of R$ 50.9 billion in the year, reveals that 94% of respondents reported increased revenues.
The massive events, such as the Confederations Cup, FIFA World Cup, the World Youth Games, and the Olympics, that are to be
held in Brazil soon open up extremely positive opportunities for the sector. The benefits can be seen in the widest range of activity. Hotels, restaurants, travel agencies, events organizers, taxi drivers, tour guides, vehicle rental companies - they are all included in the economic mix.
The Ministry of Tourism has worked to extend the legacy that will be left by these events. This includes the training of 240,000 professionals, the provision of tourist signs, accessibility projects in host cities, the construction of tourist service centers, and infrastructure. Promotion completes the list of tasks covered by the Ministry. To assist in building a positive image we want to convey to the world, the budget for the promotion of international and domestic tourism is R$ 170 million in 2012.
The official actions, coupled with the performance of the business sector, will create a significant legacy. According to FIFA, the last World Cup, in South Africa, was watched on TV by 3.2 billion people, or 46% of the world`s population. The massive exposure of Brazil will showcase our hospitality, cultural diversity and natural riches the best of everything Brazil has to offer − to the world.
Pho
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24 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Article
Development and crisis
Antonio Delfim NettoUniversity lecturer and economist
The crisis that rocked the financial system in 2007/2008 in the United States and paralyzed the global economy has now lost more than 5% of global GDP and left 50 million honest workers unemployed (says the ILO report released on the eve of Labor Day, in 2012), increasing the risk of serious social unrest in 57 countries in Europe and on the African continent. More than four years later, the difficulty of dealing with its effects shows the limitations on our knowledge of how the economic system works. It has also exposed the precariousness of what seemed like a scientific revolution: the construction of a financial economy, separated from the macro-economy by small economists, who were supposedly great mathematicians.
The reality is that there is no ‘market’ without a state that can guarantee the conditions required for it to operate in. The way the production system is organized is dictated by those who hold political power and guide economic policy that serves their interests. Just remember how in the last decade of the last century and the early years of the 21st century, the occupation power by financial interests, in the USA, led to an economic policy that slowly eroded the laws regulating financial activity and which had been produced after the Great Depression of the 1930s. Very quickly the market “scientists” produced a “doctrine” that justified the wide-ranging deregulation of financial activities in the
25 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Article
name of “efficiency” and “innovation” capable of preventing risks: 1929 never again!
The fact is that, since Adam Smith, economists have been devoted to finding the formula that would reveal the “sufficient” condition for economic development. After the Second World War progress was slow and, in fact, we do not know yet if the formula exists and whether it would be universally applicable. Even with as improved statistics, the building of endless models, a lot of mathematics and econometrics (sometimes with a pinch of history), after two and a half centuries in search of the carefully hidden Holy Grail, we have achieved negligible practical results. We may perhaps found some “necessary” conditions, but not much more than Adam Smith already knew.
It is, however, the most important problem to be explained by economics. After all, why, between the Neolithic period and the second half of the 18th century did per capita output grow
at such an extremely slow rate? Maybe it was a Malthusian trap. And why did it undergone such a rapid transformation after 1750?
Because from then at least one economy, the British, was able to capture the scattered energy in its territory (water, wood, and coal), organize itself with the appropriate institutions and dissipate it in the production of items and services consumed by a growing population.
A few years ago, Gregory Clark (“A Farewell to Alms,” 2007) proposed an interesting hypothesis that continues to generate a huge response in the literature. The efficient cause of development in England was said to have been the emergence of a middle class, with its values of prudence, saving, and a willingness to work. Clark reduces the focus in development to the “quality institutions,” or he at least suggests that different “institutions” can produce economic development.
Clark’s hypothesis is compatible with the research done by Acemoglu et al (2005) when they claim that the gains from foreign trade appropriated by the middle classes in the Netherlands and England were the efficient cause of their development. The counter-proof of this fact was the stagnation in Portugal and Spain, where the same effects were appropriated by a small elite.
Economists today stand before a new and exciting time. Unfortunately there is no prescription - and probably never will be - to tell us what “sufficient” condition is to ensure economic development. There are, however, “necessary” conditions that have been observed in history and rationalized in economics. For we Brazilians it is good to know that one of these conditions is the existence of a strong middle class. New opportunities have to be taken to renew the the more modest work of offering instruments for the good governance of States and the better allocation of their resources, without which there will be no development and the risk of turbulence will not be avoided.
Finally, we need to recover history, geography, sociology, psychology, anthropology and make more modest use of topology.
26 Yearbook ABLA 2012
ANFAVEA(Brazilian Automotive Industry Association)
aiming at the future
The international automotive business is going through profound structural transformation in consumer and producer markets, with new conceptions of products and processes, new technologies, increased competition, spare installed capacity in traditional producing countries, and the redirection of investment to emerging countries who lead and will lead the growth in global demand in the coming years.
Between 2006 and 2011 in Brazil, the automotive market expanded rapidly, growing by about 120%. In 2012 the domestic market is expected to total 3.8 million vehicles by the end f the year, compared with 1.4 million in 2005.
Our automotive market is promising, and growth is expected to continue in the coming years, with the potential to reach more than 6 million vehicles a year in the medium to long term by 2020. To support these expectations, the still low index of car ownership in the country, at one vehicle for every 6.4 inhabitants, compared with one for one in the United States, one for 1.2 in Europe, and one for 4 in Argentina. Our current fleet in circulation, about 32 million vehicles, has plenty of room to grow. Besides this, there is a favorable outlook for the national economy in the coming years, which will generate investment, production, more income
and more consumption by Brazilians - including the demand for cars and buses and trucks - with new consumers entering the market.
In 55 years of activity in the country, the automotive manufacturing industry has produced 64 million vehicles and invested about US$ 80 billion between 1980 and 2011 alone, representing 23% of current industrial GDP and 5% of national GDP overall, having a multiplying effect that extends to 250,000 companies in the country. By 2015 another US$ 22 billion in investments has been planned by the automakers in production capacity, products and processes, technology and innovation.
To set ourselves up as an important and consolidated global automotive producer we need to maximize production resources in companies and sort out the weaknesses in the country that affect its industrial competitiveness, such as the high cost of capital for investment, input costs, and inefficiencies in infrastructure, in logistics, in education, in bureaucratic processes and procedures, in laws that weigh on companies and weaken production. This is a not only a challenge for the automotive industry. Competitiveness is a challenge for the national economy in a globalized and increasingly competitive world.
Cledorvino BeliniPresident of ANFAVEA
27 Yearbook ABLA 2012
ANFAVEA(Brazilian Automotive Industry Association)
Licensing of new vehicles - domestic and imported
Vehicles
Licensing of 1-liter cars
Year Imported Domestic Total
2006 0.142 1.785 1.927
2007 0.267 2.194 2.462
2008 0.375 2.445 2.820
2009 0.476 2.664 3.141
2010 0.660 2.855 3.515
2011 0.858 2.775 3.633
(in millions of units)
Year 1-liter cars Percentage share
2003 707,430 63.2%2004 742,005 57.3%2005 757,235 56.2%2006 874,507 56.2%2007 1,066,516 54.0%2008 1,110,059 50.6%2009 1,178,752 37.8%2010 1,343,977 50.8%2011 1,197,559 45.2%
Source: ANFAVEA
Flex-fuel vehiclesMarket share
22% 50% 78% 86% 87% 84% 86.4% 83.1%
Units sold
328,000 812,000 1.430 million 2.003 million 3.329 million 2.540 million 2.876 million 2.848 million
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
1.7
0.1 0.3 0.40.5
0.70.8
2.2
2.42.7
2.92.8
ImportedDomestic
28 Yearbook ABLA 2012
CESVI
an eye on repair
The distribution sector is breaking record after record in vehicle sales. New brands are coming to the Brazilian market, and the rise of social class C is creating a new middle class with much better access to products and services in the automotive sector. This is the amazing - and demanding, in terms of qualifications needed - scenario faced by vehicle rental companies.
Not long ago, no one thought that bodywork and painting workshops would be stretched almost to their imits. It happens while the fleet was growing, the repair sector shrank - due to increasing demands for quality and productivity in workshops, especially in the last two decades.
This imbalance between demand and service capacity contains complex variables, and some pitfalls. One of the main ones is precisely a lack of training in the workshops, of claims management tools, and the deactivation of fleets.
Management toolWhen demand for quality and management
control increases, it is no longer possible to
price repairs - or estimate the time repairs take - on the basis of the fleet manager’s experience alone. A lack of professional expertise and management tools are among the reasons. The risk is that the lack of accurate and reliable information will have a direct impact on the rental company’s cash flow, the availability of its fleet, and the depreciation of its vehicles.
The key indicators for controlling the operation are average cost and time taken to carry out the services, which must be closely monitored. In order to effectively manage the fleet, a reliable system that provides updated prices and repair times is essential, so that execution time is controlled (to control vehicle availability), the frequency of claims, and a check of the number of quotations and invoices received.
Another obvious advantage of having a management system is that the entire process is computerized, including invoices and data. It is a quantum leap in terms of decision-making speed.
29 Yearbook ABLA 2012
CESVI
Improve professional standards But that’s not all. Training the people who
work on vehicle repair is absolutely vital to professional and efficient management. Well-trained professionals in repair quotation analysis improve quality in assessments such as the cost of repair in relation to the vehicle’s value, the cost of repair in relation to the parts that need to be replaced, the best techniques resulting in the most efficient repair, quality control, and deciding on a methodology to identifying damage. The time to train these professionals is now. This will determine the quality of future management.
Start nowThere is no time to lose when it comes to
professionalizing the management of repairs and deactivation of the fleet. This will make all the difference to a company’s results in a number of ways. Professional management by professionals with the best tools reduces costs, results in greater availability of vehicles, and even reduces the depreciation of each vehicle, as good maintenance is the basis of keeping vehicles in the best condition.
And for those looking at their own businesses in a new and revealing way, it identifies strengths and what can be improved in your processes. Controlling the variables in the present to build a sustainable future.
Founded in 1994, CESVI BRASIL (the Road Testing and Safety Center) is the only Brazilian research center dedicated to road safety and the provision of technical information for the sector and for society.
It was the first such center in Latin America and is a member of the Research Council for Automobile Repairs (RCAR), an international research center council with the same goals.
CESVIactivities
www.cesvibrasil.com.br
Automotivefix
www.clubedasoficinas.com.br
News
www.twitter.com/cesvibrasil
30 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Insurance
Preventive and corrective measures to prevent and reduce the number of insurance claims deserve constant attention by rental companies. No matter how effective the measures adopted are, they do not eliminate the possibility of claims, either because of the permanent exposure of the vehicles to the most diverse of risks, or because of the very
nature of Brazilian traffic conditions, or adverse conditions.
In addition, the poor maintenance of highways and the reckless attitudes of drivers increase the incidence of claims. If risks are not handled properly, claims may even compromise the survival of the rental business, which makes the way this issue is dealt with of strategic importance.
The impact of claims
31 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Insurance
Retaining or transferring risk: what to do?This is not a simple, easy-to-manage decision to make,
because irrespective of whether risk is retained or transferred,the impacts of management costs and claims onresults may be significant for rental companies.
Retaining risksRental companies must evaluate responsibility for compensating damage caused to third parties,mainly according to the size of these claimsin cases of damage caused by the driver.The decision to retain risk (self-insurance) should be limited to damage to the vehicles they own, and the rental company manager must consider the costs the decision entails: • The establishment of a base of reliable
suppliers of products and services, to repair and store vehicles
• Labor and parts costs, when the claim causes partial losses, also considering that these costs will be higher at the workshops in relation to those charged by the insurers, who have greater bargaining power.
• Total losses• Hiring their own, specialized staff to handle
claims, or outsourcing to a specialist company that can determine what effectively needs to be repaired on vehicles
• Management of claims payments and the impacts they have on cash flow
• The need for a reserve of capital with the necessary liquidity, as a contingency to pay claims for the vehicles and compensation that exceeds the amounts covered by third-party insurance.
Transferring the riskThe transfer of risk to an insurer is a decision which provides certainty about the costs on premiums to be paid, and has the advantage that the rental company knows what these costs are in advance, and so canmake provisions for them in their cash flow, withoutany surprises throughout the term of the policy.To transfer risk to an insurer, rental companies should always get advice from an insurance broker whoknows the car rental segment, because even in taking this option, managers will still have to handle the following difficulties: • The insurer’s acceptance of the risks they have
decided to transfer• Taking out a policy in such a way that serves
the features of their fleet, either in terms of the frequency of its transfer or what has been agreed in the vehicle rental contracts
• Managing and taking on any possible losses as a result of risks not covered and / or claims rejected by the insurer, such as theft, driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs, and claims that exceed the amounts insured by third-parties’ insurance
• Quick and fair pricing of the insurance contract, including endorsements of transfers by inclusion / exclusion / replacement of vehicles
• Speed by the insurer in dealing with claims and payments, including write offs, as delays result in significant losses to rental companies
• Fast and efficient 24-hour service for emergencies.
32 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Insurance
Ildebrando T. S. Gozzo
• Carry out periodic maintenance of vehicles, complying with the manufacturer’s guidelines and determinations
• Not take out insurance through managers of financial institutions. No matter how attractive the proposal seems, these professionals do not have the technical knowledge required, the commitment, or the time available to serve the most varied needs that rental companies have
• Never transfer the risk to companies and entities other than insurers, such as associations and cooperatives that sell vehicle protection, working illegally in the insurance
It must be remembered that insurance acceptance and costs are directly related to the results obtained from the insurance policies and, therefore, everything rental companies do to reduce risks will be translated directly into reduced costs, in renewals of insurance policies, and a reduction in the number of claims.
Rental companies must also take the following precautions:
industry and not having the reserves required to settle claims they deal with
• Adopt a preventive stance by installing trackers, which facilitate the recovery of vehicles in the case of theft
• Instruct drivers not to leave the vehicles in places that are considered to be dangerous or deserted, suggesting the use of car parks
• Encourage measures and initiatives so that drivers, in partnership with rental companies in outsourcing contracts, drive carefully and responsibly, whenever necessary providing courses on defensive driving in order to make them aware of the risks they are exposed to.
Job: Iveco-Agosto -- Empresa: Leo Burnett -- Arquivo: 23794-016-IVECO-Ecoline-AblaIngles-21x28_pag001.pdfRegistro: 86331 -- Data: 11:35:07 02/08/2012
34 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Technology
As of January 1, 2014 all the cars made in Brazil must leave the assembly line equipped with ABS and dual airbags. No one questions the improved safety that such equipment will result in for drivers and pedestrians. However, there is concern about the possible financial burden of the technological upgrade on the price of vehicles.
The concern stems from the cost of these two products. Currently offered as optional extras by dealerships, they cost about R$ 5,000. So, in a simple calculation a business could multiply this amount by the number of vehicles and be taken aback by how much it would have to pay to renew its fleet in 2014.
Everyone knows that in technology, as with any other segment of production, prices fall in proportion to increased scale.
This is also what rental business owners believe. What is not known so far is by how much prices will fall.
With just over a year before the law comes into force, even the car manufacturers do not have this information. The automakers consulted for this article preferred not to comment.
However, one source (who preferred to remain anonymous) said that as the equipment will no longer be optional, the automakers understand they should not disclose the price in isolation. It would be the same as stating the cost if tires, engines, gear boxes, and other systems.
When contacted, the manufacturers of the equipment took different positions. The air bag manufacturer made no comment. But the main ABS manufacturer clarified the situation.
According to Carlo Gibran, Sales and Marketing Manager at the Chassis Systems Control division at Bosch, as of 2014 two cost reduction features will apply: increased scale, and the installation of the product on the assembly line.
Gibran stresses that by providing the equipment as an optional extra, automakers included in their calculations the cost of logistics - transport and storage. In making them standard items, they are delivered by suppliers minutes prior to assembly. The elimination of logistics reduces the cost by about 10%, he says. A higher percentage is obtained from large scale production.
The price of technology
35 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Technology
The Bosch executive cites as examples the entire 1.6 of Polo range, from Volkswagen, and Fiat’s Gran Siena. Equipped with ABS, these cars are being marketed without there being an impact on the price that scares consumers.
In the rental segment it is expected that the price curve follows the path taken by other products in the recent past. “A car with power steering and air-conditioning until recently was a luxury, and expensive. Today, with new production technology this added value is bearable,” says Paulo Nemer, vice president of ABLA’s National Board.
Specifically regarding ABS and air bags, Paulo says that today’s costs in Brazil are cheaper than in the near past and certainly will be cheaper in the near future.
Marcio Castelo Gonçalves, Regional Director of ES, concurs. For him, the two devices are already
Two types of technology in BrazilA supplier of ABS for all the automakers in Brazil today, Bosch is ready to continue
is market leadership as of 2014. “We have invested in the industrial plant in Campinas (São Paulo state) and we can supply the entire domestic market,” says Carlo Gibran, Sales and Marketing Manager at the Chassis Systems Control division at Bosch.
Two technological versions of ABS will be used in Brazil: generation 8 will be is used in vehicles with platforms older than five years old. Models launched after 2010 arealready prepared to be equipped with generation 9.
“This does not change the quality of the braking or compromise safety,” says Gibran. “ABS is an electronic component, like a cell phone. Each generation upgrades some mechanisms, such as energy consumption,” he says.
being incorporated into Brazilian culture. “I don’t think that it will be a shock to consumers. Gradual changes are easily taken on board,” he says.
According to businesspeople, there will not be a scramble to buy cars in late 2013 to beat the price increases at the beginning of the following year. “The rental companies are constantly renewing their fleets. So there is no escaping the effects of the market. Sooner or later you will suffer the consequences,” says Gonçalves. “The rental companies renew their fleets all the time. What will happen in this period will be an increased volume of vehicles in the fleets,” says Nemer.
As Resolution 340 is not retroactive, for a period rental companies will have access to models with and without air bags and ABS. In this case there will be two price lists for the same model.
36 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Technology
In a technological world, connectivity has become essential to the management process. It widen horizons and gives businesspeople access to data on their company, customers, suppliers, and government agencies in seconds.
Brazil has the best vehicle rental management systems in the world. They even control the physical use of the fleet with trackers at increasingly attractive costs. They also make it possible to monitor the receipt, processing and collection of fines, the control and scheduling of fleet maintenance, the opening and closing of contracts with control on credit limits,
Total control of the companyand even the blocking of vehicle rental to customers who have not paid.
A tailor made program for the sector grants access to data in the most different of ways. It may be a specific search, such as a car’s individual performance.This can bring up the car’s net purchase cost, the interest due (if financed) and the final amount invested, operational costs on fuel, servicing, claims, mechanical problems and the number of days when it was out of service. You can see also see the length and costs if rentals, the market price for the car, the estimated sale date, and
37 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Technology
the balance of revenues, expenses and profit on the vehicle.
You can get a unit’s performance record (headquarters or subsidiary) and the amount it contributes to the business.
In matters of security, in a few seconds a customer’s registration can be pulled up on the screen, with documents, photographs, and images of their credit card. If the user, operator or manager, wants to go a little further in their research, they can access banking information and credit histories.
When it comes to preservation of the assets, links to insurance and tracking companies that can locate the car 24 hours a day and provide instant reports on the whether the vehicle is in operation or not can be made. If the fleet is outsourced through a partnership with companies that provide fuel cards, you can know where the
vehicle is being filled up, the fuel used, costs and even the vehicle’s mileage at that moment.
Systems that send out alerts on dates and deadlines for the completion of certain activities are also part of the program. The head of the finance department gets the information on their computer screen on the day payments are made and received, the person in charge of maintenance is notified of the vehicles’ mileage and service periods. Similarly, the contracts manager is informed in advance of renewal deadlines.
The system distributes tasks only to the department that has to perform them. The owner of the rental company and chosen executives have access to all this information through the use of passwords. The managers can get a full overview of the company in a total of 150 reports, including data from every department, on all the products, processes, people, customers, suppliers, and more. Or they can be grouped, in various presentation formats.
A company that uses a state-of-the-art system is on a level playing field with the largest rental companies in the country in terms of management and service capacity, even having access to international reservation centers.
Contact with public bodies, such as the tax authorities, for example, makes it possible to export the company’s accounting data which, integrated with accounting software will provide consistent information and make sure the company is not fined for providing inaccurate data to the tax authority.
One of the concerns businesspeople have in using IT is over the cost of the investment.After all, it is traditional to believe technology is expensive. Among the best programs for rental companies in Brazil is Fleet Max - which costs R$1,650 to be installed and R$ 132 a month for the usage license, regardless of how many machines it is installed on.
It is necessary, then, to get all the information required about the results provided in order to know if the return is worth the investment. The company responsible for Fleet Max says that about 100 vehicle rental companies now use it in Brazil.
38 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Institutional
Brazil’s vehicle rental segment is dynamic. The rental companies are investing in every area, in order to maintain the high level of services on the market. In step with its members’ growth, the Brazilian Vehicle Rental Association (ABLA) is strengthening its staff and service structure.
Currently, ABLA is improving its communication processes with the various agents involved in the sector’s dynamic. The intention is to further facilitate access to consultations via a documentation center to provide accurate information when needed.
Everything related to the universe of institutional and market data, information on claims or taxation, among the other statistics, much of it already available, will be reorganized. According to Jorge Machado, ABLA’s administrative manager, this information is in short supply and will now be supplied in an appropriate manner.
ABLA is also contacted a lot by private individuals wanting information about rental companies, and making complaints about services, among other things. They contact ABLA to find rental companies in Brazil, and there are customers making criticisms or praising companies, consultants and students requesting data for projects, and potential entrepreneurs wanting suggestions to get into the business. “We serve everyone with the same degree of care. We do not let anyone go unanswered,”
says the manager. He adds that many people are surprised when they get a reply.
Along with institutional action, ABLA works with public agencies to tell the authorities about problems that certain laws or regulations cause the sector. One example is Resolution 363 from the National Traffic Council, which requires notarization of the authenticity of both the vehicle’s owner (the car rental company) and the driver committing a traffic violation before transferring the fine and points from the owner to the real driver when the fine was imposed.
The aim is to optimize the online communication tools. Every member has exclusive access to the ABLA website and can check up on current policies, answer legal questions, and more.
ABLA has other claims and considerations to raise, such as a reduced road tax and a specific credit line for businesses in the sector, similar to that granted to other segments (by Brazil’s state-owned development bank, BNDES).
ABLA is determined to raise its representation in public sectors, and to improve quality and professional standards, serving all its members equally.
The sector is going through a period of improvement in various senses and the rental companies are consolidating themselves structurally. There is great potential for growth in areas such as car rentalfor leisure, just for the weekend.
Towards consolidation
39 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Institutional
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40 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Institutional
There is a conceptual disparity in public safety and its consequences for individual freedom. If efficiency in the former means a restriction of the latter, the adoption of intermediate practices sometimes leads to partial, and hence unsatisfactory, results.
The issue of safety and privacy is a recurring one. It was discussed recently when companies debated whether they could monitor email sent by their employees and their internet use.
It has now become necessary to debate Resolution No. 245/07, from the National Traffic Council (Contran), which establishes the
Public safety,individual freedom
mandatory installation of trackers in every car, light van, light truck, bus, moped and motorcycle. It must be installed by the maker - meaning it will not be optional.
41 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Institutional
It has been celebrated by safety advocates as a tool that can inhibit car theft, as it makes it possible to immediately locate the vehicle. However, it has been legally challenged because it exposes the routes drivers take, including for private matters.
If dialogue is the foundation of democracy, it is commendable that society has the right to understand the pros and cons of the measures and processes that affect daily life and can choose what suits it. In this case the option may be even be to bear the financial costs of a higher insurance premium as theft increases. Trackers will not prevent theft, however, but will be a facilitator in retrieving vehicles, the rental companies’ property.
While the issue has not been fully resolved, the rental companies are doing their best to limit their suffering. Registration in advance is one tool. In this case, the rental company asks for some personal data and a copy of a credit card.
However, 5% of potential new customers refuse to give such information in advance. And when they arrive at the counter they usually want the car to be processed and released to them quickly. It is usually those in a rush who arouse some kind of suspicion.
What can be deduced is that the saying, “It is better to be safe than sorry,” successfully employed in various sectors, needs to be applied in public safety. After all, there are other agents focused on safety and it seems that nothing that is done is enough to stop organized gangs. They have demonstrated a capacity to overcome every attempt to stop them.
Intelligence is the best tool. Against criminals, the ability to reinvent at any time may make the difference in keeping us ahead. In this process, speed is fundamental.
42 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Security
Vehicle rental companies and their customers, as well as Brazilian society in general, have always been victims of vehicle thefts. Despite the protection devices and trackers installed by private companies and the actions promised by government, the problem just keeps getting worse, as do the statistics on recovery.
In the state of Espírito Santo, in recent months vehicle theft has increased by 50% and the recovery rate is near to zero.
One reason for such boldness by criminals has been explained head of the Vehicle Robbery and Theft Division in Curitiba (DFRV), Marco Antonio de Goes. It involves Law no. 12,403/2011, that grants bail for crimes with a penalty of up to four years, as in the case of theft and receiving stolen goods.
The Law has had a direct impact on the work done by the police. “Legislation has relaxed the penalties and increased the sense ofimpunity,” complains de Goes. Explaining the 9.4% increase in vehicle theft and robbery in the state of Paraná the first quarter of 2012, compared with the same period the year before, he explains, “In most cases, offenders do not admit stealing vehicles and they are booked for fencing. On paying bail, they are released.”
The criminals are getting bolder, but there are statistics on the most dangerous places for drivers, which call for extra care to be taken by them. Nevertheless, either because of ignorance or carelessness, these precautions are not always taken. In the case of armed robbery, most crimes occur in areas where this type of crime is common. Surely, more care on the part of drivers would reduce the crime rate.
Crime rate rise:the law and consumers
In order to prevent, or at least reduce, crime the most commonly adopted procedure by vehicle rental companies is insurance. Some rental companies have insurance on all their vehicles.
For Maira Feltrin, an advisor to the consumer protection body, Procon, in São Paulo, vehicle renters are not required to take out insurance. “Consumer have to understand all the conditions in order to decide. For example, during the the rental period they are
43 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Security
responsible for the vehicle and must return it to the company. But insurance is optional and not the rental company’s decision.”
She advises companies to have their recommendations put in writing and that consumers also give their decision in writing.
If the company has reason to be concerned about the consequences of Law 12,403, fortunately the level of consumer awareness has increased. Currently, they agree to pay a little more to avoid larger losses, and most choose some type of risk coverage.
• Published on May 4, 2011, Law 12,403 entered into force 60 days later. Signed by President Dilma Rousseff and the Justice Minister, José Eduardo Cardozo, it is entitled “On Prison, Precautionary Measures, and Parole.”
• Article 283 begins thus: “No one shall be imprisoned except when caught in the act or by written and substantiated order by the competent judicial authority, as a result of a conviction or, in the course of an investigation or suit, as temporary detention or remand.”
• Article 310 Upon receipt of the prison order, judges must: I - convert the illegal imprisonment, or III - convert imprisonment to preventive parole, when the requirements listed in Article 312 of this Code are met, and precautionary measures other than prison prove inadequate or insufficient, or III - grant bail, with or without payment.
• “Sole Paragraph. If the judge finds that the accused committed the deed under the conditions listed in items I to III the main section of Article 23 of Decree-Law No. 2,848, of December 7, 1940 - Criminal Code - they may justifiably grant the accusedparole, on the condition that every procedural acts has been complied with, under penalty of revocation.”
about Law 12,403
44 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Bolivia
The intensive work done by the Brazilian Association of Vehicle Rental Companies (ABLA), and other entities, to inform society about the large number of vehicles stolen from Brazil on the streets of Bolivia has had repercussions in the media, aroused the interest of the Brazilian authorities, and provoked a reaction from the Bolivian government.
“We need to stop a perverse cycle that raises suspicion, feeds drug trafficking, and creates a climate of insecurity in the border area,” says Marcel Fortuna Biato, Brazil’s Ambassador to Bolivia.
In turn, President Evo Morales of Bolivia and his government have tried to assuage the criticism by creating the Vehicle Inspection Law, by which the owners of stolen cars in the country could get them registered. It was the solution to dispose of an irksome situation quickly.
About 123,000 Bolivians rushed to register their illegally-owned cars. According to official information, 8,500 cars made in Brazil were identified but only 483 were considered to be illegally owned.
Bolivia in the spotlight
In March 2012 Bolivian Deputy Foreign Minister, Juan Carlos Alurralde, said the government plans to repatriate them, as long as the owners so request.
However, Bolivian government data do not nearly get close to that from the authorities in Brazil. The Federal Police in Brazil estimates that 15,000 cars stolen in Brazil are now in Bolivia. ABLA figures also show that the ‘official’ statistics have been underestimated, because in Bolivia there are more than 1,200 cars owned by its members.
The work done by ABLA continues. The result of its actions is evidenced in the reaction by the Bolivian government, which has acknowledged the problem. It is perhaps the first step in a long process that will bring the vehicles back to their rightful owners in Brazil.
Incidentally, ABLA recently created a program to recover stolen vehicles that have been taken to Bolivia. “We have identified a scam in which the client rented the vehicle for six days and then claimed it had been stolen, but that same person crossed the border,” says Paulo Gaba Jr., president of ABLA’s National Council.
46 Yearbook ABLA 2012
The Fleet
The economic crisis affecting developed countries may result in the migration of European, American and Asian companies. With their home markets reduced, and problems exporting caused by protection mechanisms created by the Brazilian government, companies are planning to set up in Brazil, with an eye on its growth potential.
This will raise the level of competitiveness in Brazil. Only companies that increase efficiency through advances in productivity and cost reduction will succeed. The degree of precision must be absolute, and any waste will make a big difference, say analysts.
Among the sectors with the potential to improve results, fleets are worthy of special mention. Through the outsourcing of their vehicles, companies make operational gains and so improve their financial results.
The first advantage lies in doing away with having massive capital stuck in vehicles. A company that needs to operate hundreds of vehicles continuously must have many others in reserve. They are used when the main ones are sent to be serviced, or they have to go to the workshops for repairs, or they are out of operation because of accidents.
An outsourced fleet, besides eliminating the investment in building up this asset, keeps the entire fleet in operation, as in the event of a problems with a vehicle the company gets a replacement immediately. Outsourcing is important in making the company more agile, focused on its core business, being more competitive, reducing costs and adding quality to its services.
Outsourcing: increased efficiency and better results
47 Yearbook ABLA 2012
The Fleet
Cost items Own fleet (costs)Outsourced fleet
(Benefits)
Licensing and license plate Your company manages them Already licensed and plated
Vehicle distribution logistics Your company distributes them Delivered where requested
Insurance Your company contracts and pays for it Already included in the rent
Spare parts Your company sources and purchases them The rental company pays
Maintenance staff Your company hires and pays them Rental company / network staff
Reserve vehicle Your company takes on the risk Rental company takes on the risk
24-hour assistance Your company has to contract it Rental company service
Fire, Theft, or Accident Your company takes on the risk Rental company takes on the risk
Legal Advice Your company contracts it Rental company takes care of everything
Capital opportunity Your company invests in the fleet The rental company invests in the fleet
Taxes Your company pays Rental company pays
Fleet renewal Your company invests in it The rental company invests in it
Idle fleet Your company pays for it The rental company pays for it
It also ends losses caused by the natural depreciation of the fleet. A vehicle depreciates by an average 15% per year, but in the first year loses 20% to 25%, depending on the brand and model.
Another advantage of outsourcing is that the company always has a new fleet. Depending on needs and usage, all the vehicles are changed at one or, at most, two years of age.
It would be wrong, however, to think that outsourcing only benefits large fleets.
Outsourcing provides flexibility in negotiations over the contract and what it includes in terms of services, and it can free up the rental company from any commitment to insurance, servicing, parts, vehicle replacement, and other commitments. The advantages are shown in the table below.
The advantages of outsourcing
48 Yearbook ABLA 2012
SEST/SENAT
When it was created in 1993, the most optimistic forecasts were that SEST / SENAT could fulfill its mission to support training for the transport sector and offer good infrastructure in healthcare, leisure, sports and culture. After 18 and a half years in existence, SEST / SENAT has exceeded those forecasts.
Although constantly improving, it can be said to have consolidated itself as regards accomplishing its mission. The goals to assist people working in transport, and their families, and the community they are part of, have been easily achieved. Since its inception, over 100 million requests have been met.
In 2011, SEST / SENAT trained 1,156,630 people in over 250 courses, compared with 1,085,468 in 2010 - growth of 10.6% in just one year. In the areas of healthcare, sports, leisure and culture, 2011 also saw significant gains. The total
number of people seen to in medical and dental clinics, added to the physical, sporting,social, cultural and recreational activities, reached 6,726,494, up by 11.1% on 2010’s 6,043,117.
The numbers confirm the importance of SEST / SENAT in improving quality of life for transport workers and the community. People who do the training courses it offers are professionally prepared to grow in their current jobs or new jobs, with prospects of higher pay. Similarly, the healthcare, sports, leisure and culture options improve quality of life for people linked to SEST / SENAT.
SEST / SENAT is, then, effectively improving the lives of workers in the transport sector. And not only in social terms, which are important, but economically, as transport companies are assured of skilled labor, trained on courses offered by the institution.
Targets exceeded
49 Yearbook ABLA 2012
SEST/SENAT
Driver Training In the second half of last year we launched
the Driver Training program for the job market, increasing the supply of skilled labor, so filling a gap in the passenger and freight transport sector that has been seen in recent years, caused by economic growth.
The courses are being held at SEST / SENAT units throughout Brazil. The targets for the training are newly qualified drivers without experience in the transportation sector. The professionals can choose training to driving trucks, trailers, buses and coaches. The initiative by SEST / SENAT allows the inclusion of people on the documented labor market, meeting the market’s needs and ensuring economic sustainability for the transport business.
Transport at the FIFA World CupAnother important project that has been
developed by SEST / SENAT is “Transport at the FIFA World Cup,” whose goal is to prepare and qualify taxi drivers, bus drivers, guides tourist coaches), ticket sellers, taxi company staff, and vehicle rental company staff to provide excellent, professional services for the visitors expected for the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil.
The project not only enables the development of industry professionals, through training in the skills needed during the World Cup, but it also creates employment prospects, attracting public and private investment in the sector and improving the quality of transport-related services.
“Transport at the FIFA World Cup” is being run by SEST / SENAT at its operational units in the 12 host cities for the 2014 FIFA World Cup: Brasília (DF), Salvador (BA), Cuiabá (MT), Natal (RN), Recife (PE), Curitiba(PR), Fortaleza (CE), Rio de Janeiro (RJ), Belo Horizonte (MG), São Paulo (SP), Porto Alegre (RS) and Manaus (AM), and will benefit approximately 390,000 industry professionals.
SEST / SENAT has been renewing its work every year. For 2012 it plans to expand service, opening new units in cities with economic potential and intense transport activity, throughout Brazil. New projects are being developed. Given such great achievements and results, SEST / SENAT is one of the biggest social projects in the country. It is the pride of transport companies, the pride of transport workers, and the pride of Brazil.
50 Yearbook ABLA 2012
FENALOC
Many people have questioned me about the need for a federation for the car rental sector. They say that today the federations they are affiliated to are strong and that the services they offer are sufficient.
These are valid and consistent arguments, but in my view they lack an overview of the process.
Today there are seventeen Sindiloc units in Brazil, divided into federations for trade,
transport, services, and so on. Although our business permeates all these activities, there is a lack of understanding in the entities cited about the complexity of our activity.
Issues facing our industry, such as ruling 492, traffic fines, taxes and labor laws will never be understood in the necessary depth, which hampers the attempt to find solutions.
So, as long as we depend on organizations
The strength of representation
Article by José Adriano Donzelli
President of the National Federation of Vehicle Rental Companies (FENALOC)
51 Yearbook ABLA 2012
FENALOC
that are not geared fully to our activity, we will be at best supporting players and never the protagonists in our own story. I am sure that we can and must seek more.
Fenaloc exists not just to see what it can do for the sector, but to represent it, and provide our identity. That is to say, it unites the entire sector, coordinating diverse efforts made by the Sindiloc units and transforming our realities.
Only Fenaloc will offer us the authority that we will make us honor our commitments. This will make us strong and allow us to influence and pass on our values.
Of course we do not have the structure that these federations have today, but they went through the same difficulties. I understand that we live in a time when the anxiety of immediacy blurs our vision of the process. These are immediate times, times of fast answers and fast food, in which speed is more valued than steadfastness.
We want to enjoy the benefits without the proceedings, however I know that no fruit can be harvested before its time, that planting and harvesting have their times, that any intervention in the process can compromise results.
No matter how fragile a seed is, it carries the code, all the principles, all the determination of the tree and fruits - that is, the grounding of the processes. So, more than knowing where we can get to, we must be sure of where we came from, aware of what we are now.
When we are chosen to deal with processes we have an obligation to correct these distortions of understanding. Even running the risk of criticism and misunderstanding, we have to move forward, even when we have good reasons to give up, we must persevere. We cannot let our momentary perception of failure be a factor that limits a bright future.
May God be with us on this journey.
52 Yearbook ABLA 2012
PQA
In 2012, ABLA’s National Training and Qualification Program (PQA) turns five years old. One of the courses scheduled for this season is “The right price,” for the vehicle rental managers.
The PQA was developed for professionals at vehicle rental companies in 2007 by ABLA, in order to improve the quality of services and improve the managers’ strategic vision. Its content is disseminated in books, manuals, online literature, and indicators. This is in addition to seminars, short courses and talks about professionalization that have been given for free.
“Our industry was lacking in procedures, regulations and standards. We had, and we still have, a lot of intellectual property, decades of experience, but nothing was registered. Similarly, it was necessary to prepare the workforce,” says José Adriano Donzelli, coordinator of the project and current President of the National Federation of Vehicle Rental Companies (Fenaloc).
Regarding training, ABLA sought out pioneering partnerships, such as the Socioeconomic Studies and Research Foundation (Fepese) at the Federal University of Santa Catarina, which ran five distance-learning courses for eight months, divided into the following modules: Business Management, Fleet Management, Administrative and Financial Management, Operational Services, Quality in Sales, and the Market and Marketing. “It is important to note that the content was developed jointly by academics, entrepreneurs, and technical staff and also put together by the students who took part in the training. Several seminars and surveys were implemented,”adds Donzelli.
The work resulted in customized courses for the needs of the sector, given by people who understand education, with didactic material consisting of books, DVDs, video classes, teleconferences, and more besides. Since 2007
PQa entersa new stage
2012
53 Yearbook ABLA 2012
PQA
approximately 4,600 people have taken part in the training targeting both the professionals who work on the front line, and businesspeople, managers and leaders in the rental sector.
In addition to distance-learning courses, seminars and talks were given at the Training Centers, during the ABLA Fair and Forum in 2009 and 2011.
According to Donzelli, the PQA is a continuous process. “It is now being evaluated
and reformulated, with the same initial goals: to expand companies’ strategic vision and the quality of the services provided,” he says.
ABLA also supports the Ministry of Tourism’s efforts in training people for the FIFA World Cup. Examples include the National Access to Technical Education and Employment Program (Pronatec), which now offers 32 free courses related to tourism, as well as English, Spanish and sign language.
Training motivates employeesThe National Training and Qualification Program (PQA) was a breakthrough
which has made strides toward a more professional vehicle rental segment. Previously, knowledge of the sector was restricted to the leadership. In general, knowledge limited to the administration of a business, without having an overview of the market, impacts management practices, competitiveness, planning in the medium and long terms, and career plans.
In this scenario, some vehicle rental companies had problems making certain activities more efficient and effective, including recruiting and selecting staff. There was no standard descriptive title and function for the sector. The PQA has met this demand and this has been reflected positively in the results. Understanding the peculiarities of the area makes the business as a whole more dynamic, achieving better results. Productivity increases and customer service creates loyalty. The PQA was innovative and bold.
Today, a lot of rental managers encourage their staff to invest in training. Some companies pay half the cost of the courses, such as high school graduation, degrees, languages and so on, which contribute to improving performance at work.
To meet the growing demand in the sector, which has accompanied the country’s economic development, the market has to be well understood in order to see and create business opportunities. To this end, the workforce has to be constantly enhanced, from the leaders to the frontline staff.
National Training and Qualification
Program
54 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Article
2011 – an important year in the law
Adriano Augusto Pereira de CastroAttorney - Legal adviser to ABLA
2011 was a year in which various events of a legal interest to the vehicle rental industry occurred. The year began under the shadow of Resolution 363 entering force, which establishes the procedures for the notifying and processing of punishments for traffic violations. Resolution 363/2010 stipulates, in its original wording, new administrative procedures that are not aligned with the reality of the vehicle rental sector, such as notarized authentication of the driver on completing the forms and the provision of notarized copies of all the documentary proof of vehicle ownership. Initially scheduled to enter force in 2011, DENATRAN decided to put it back to 2012, aware of the various suggestions made by ABLA and other sectors of society to improve Resolution 363.
In December 2011 we had good news from the Ceará State Tribunal of Justice when it ruled that it was unconstitutional to hold vehicle rental companies responsible for fines for traffic violations. This is the first precedent in the second instance in this regard, and the most important legal precedent of the year, as the Tribunal carried out an in-depth investigation of the issues presented and decided that the Traffic Code establishes that vehicle rental companies shall only be liable for traffic violations related to
the legal and mechanical state of their vehicles. This important decision opens the way for a revisiting of the jurisprudence that created the system of liability without the the vehicle rental companies behind responsible for traffic violations committed by their customers.
In Amazonas state, Manaus enacted a law that establishes the tax on services (ISS) on vehicles rented with a driver. Manaus’ law may be of questionable constitutionality, but it is another chapter in the long debate about a distinction being made for this mode of rental. In transportation, the company is hired to achieve a specific aim: to transport people or things form one place to another. In vehicle rental, with or without a driver, what is offered is the availability of the vehicle for use by the renter. Any inclusion of drivers only adds one more of several services offered by the rental companies, without making it something other than a transport activity. The vehicle rental companies have won successive victories in the courts, but the question occasionally reappears, as in this case in Manaus.
In Paraná, Curitiba had to modify its traffic structure because of the legal ruling on the incompetence of URBS Urbanização de Curtiba S/A to monitor traffic and levy fines. This is an
55 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Article
important in case that reinforces the jurisprudence line established by the Superior Tribunal of Justice (STJ) on the issue, because the profit motive for companies was ruled as incompatible with the public interest in traffic monitoring.
In Minas Gerais, the Tribunal of Justice (TJMG) decided that the law in the state that implemented VAT Convention 64/2006, by CONFAZ, was unconstitutional. Convention 64/2006 created a new tax, VAT on Vehicle Rental, requiring car rental companies to pay VAT on the sale of their vehicles acquired fewer than twelve months previously. Convention 64/2006 was adopted by many other states, making the case an important precedent. In addition to the unconstitutional tax, Convention 64/2006 created its own criteria to determine the taxable event, calculation base, and other
elements of the tax, creating a tax regime that was substantially more onerous for vehicle rental companies. The case was referred to the Supreme Federal Tribunal (STF) to rule on its overall effect - that is, so that the case serves as a precedent for other Tribunals in the country.
In Rio de Janeiro the Municipal Government published a call for private interest to carrying out economic and technical feasibility studies for the roll out of an electric vehicle rental system. It is a commendable initiative by the municipality, using its ability to make the call as a legitimate and just tool for the exchange of knowledge and information with private initiative with a view to renting vehicles as a component of the public transport system.
Looking back, 2011 was a year of major benefits for the vehicle rental industry.
56 Yearbook ABLA 2012
National board 2011
In certain circumstances the self-congratulation can seem to be self-indulgent. However, when talking about ABLA’s governing body, it is simply the recognition they deserve.
After all, although in business management professionalism is an elementary component, it alone does not produce results. Added to these features other qualities are necessary, such as competence and the intrinsic values of personality, such as ethics and commitment.
Without being pedantic, but rather for reasons of justice, ABLA is proud of its managers, council members and those on general commissions − that is, proud of the professionals who, directly or indirectly, contribute to the construction of one of the most important bodies in Brazil.
Here you can see who these businesspeople and executives are, the people who work throughout the country in a process that achieves positive results for ABLA and who also contribute to the country’s growth. (The council below sat in 2010 and 2011).
National board
Paulo Gaba Jr.President
Paulo Roberto do Val NemerVice President
Alberto de Camargo Vidigal
Member
Carlos César Rigolino Junior
Member
Alberto Faria da SilvaMember
José Adriano DonzelliMember
Luiz LopesMendonça
Member
João Claudio BourgCEO
57 Yearbook ABLA 2012
National board 2011
Roberto Bacelar Portugal Filho
Member
Nildo PedrosaMember
Saulo Tomaz Fróes
Member
Valmor Emilio Weiss
Member
Alberto Nemer NetoSubstitute
Carlos Roberto
Pinto FaustinoSubstitute
Carlos Benedito
Adão TeixeiraSubstitute
Cássio LemmertzSubstitute
Eládio Paniágua Jr.Substitute
Luiz Carlos LangSubstitute
João Carlos
de Abreu SilveiraSubstitute
Marcelo Ribeiro
FernandesSubstitute
Nelma CavalcantiSubstitute
Reinaldo Tedesco
PetroneSubstitute
Paulo Miguel Jr.Substitute
58 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Regional Boards
2011
Supervisory Board
Antonio PimentelMember
Eduardo Corrêa da SilvaMember
Joades Alves de SouzaSubstitute
Félix PeterSubstitute
Flavio GerduloMember
Jacqueline Moraes de Melo
Member
João Regueira de Souza Filho
Substitute
Emerson CiottoSubstitute
Paulo H. Bonilha JuniorMember
Raimundo Nonatode Castro Teixeira
Member
José ZuquimMiliternoSubstitute
Marco Antoniode Almeida Lemos
Substitute
Supervisory Board2011
59 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Regional Boards
2011
Regional Boards
NorthVictor Simões da Silva
AmazonasJosé Emílio Houat
Pará/Amapá
Fábio BertozziTocantins
Célio FonsecaRoraima
Antonio da SilvaRondônia/Acre
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Acre 97 98 110 131 200 200 214Amapá 632 731 819 950 420 600 631Amazonas 1,990 1,996 2,236 2,594 1,820 2,075 2,500Pará 4,732 5,387 6,033 7,328 8,000 8,400 8,320Rondônia 305 312 384 457 600 1,020 1,037Roraima 296 309 352 426 503 502 640Tocantins 258 351 400 489 567 950 974
Total 8.310 9.184 10.334 12.375 12.110 13.747 14.316
Vehicle fleet
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Acre 5 5 5 5 7 8 8Amapá 6 6 6 6 7 9 28Amazonas 16 17 18 18 21 21 22Pará 68 63 60 60 51 53 56Rondônia 8 11 8 8 11 12 10Roraima 10 10 8 8 12 14 19Tocantins 12 12 9 9 12 16 14
Total 125 124 114 114 121 133 157
14,316
157
In 2011 the vehicle fleet in the region
numbered
In 2011 vehicle rental
companies in the region
numbered
Number of rental companies
60 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Regional Boards
2011
Lusirlei AlbertiniAlagoas
Simone PinoBahia
Marconi José
de M. DutraBahia
Aleksander
Rodrigues RangelCeará/Piauí
Antonio Cesar de Araújo Freitas
Maranhão
Valdir Laurindo Maranhão
Northeast
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Alagoas 1,231 1,246 1,383 1,626 1,980 2,130 2,442Bahia 9,500 9,623 12,244 12,450 13,650 14,128 15,500Ceará 3,510 4,233 4,699 5,598 9,997 10,132 10,800Maranhão 1,490 2,158 2,395 2,780 3,100 3,534 3,850Paraíba 1,011 991 1,090 1,274 1,490 1,590 1640Pernambuco 5,923 6,010 6,791 7,879 9,060 10,119 11,272Piauí 597 1,010 1,111 1,308 1,600 1,800 1,850Rio Grande do Norte 3,935 4,911 5,599 6,551 9,993 10,830 10,930Sergipe 2,111 3,256 3,810 4,381 3,723 3,900 4,144
Total 29,308 33,438 39,122 43,847 54,593 58,163 62,428
Vehicle fleet
62,428
In 2011 the vehicle
fleet in the region numbered
61 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Regional Boards
2011
Olavo Bilac Cruz Neto
Paraíba
Antonio PimentelPernambuco
Alberto Jorge Alves de Queiroz
Pernambuco
Otávio Meira
Lins NetoSergipe
João Bosco da SilvaRio Grande do Norte
Number of rental companies 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Alagoas 25 28 24 24 30 32 37Bahia 183 179 182 182 187 181 189Ceará 51 49 51 51 81 89 92Maranhão 27 32 28 28 32 32 38Paraíba 29 35 31 31 33 35 39Pernambuco 66 62 64 64 79 83 85Piauí 14 16 15 15 19 20 17Rio Grande do Norte 68 53 41 41 45 46 80Sergipe 21 23 28 28 33 34 30
Total 484 477 464 464 539 551 607 607
In 2011 vehicle rental
companies in the region
numbered
62 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Regional Boards
2011
Center-West
Vehicle fleet 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Federal District 9,225 10,245 11,893 13,667 15,180 16,216 17,237Goiás 4,830 5,862 6,683 7,618 7,000 8,521 8,600Mato Grosso 2,110 1,573 1,856 2,172 3,423 3,765 3,943Mato Grosso do Sul 1,520 2,293 2,637 3,112 3,215 3,925 4,025
Total 17,685 19,973 23,069 26,569 28,818 32,427 33,805
Number of rental companies 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Federal District 48 47 46 46 49 52 57Goiás 45 45 58 52 44 48 45
Mato Grosso 21 29 18 18 12 26 15Mato Grosso do Sul 33 17 28 28 24 17 23
Total 147 138 150 144 129 143 140
Rodrigo Flávio Sá Roriz
Federal District
Joades Alvesde Souza
Goiás
Alvani Manoel
LaurindoMato Grosso
Marco Antoniode Almeida Lemos Mato Grosso do Sul
33,805
140
In 2011 the vehicle fleet in the region
numbered
In 2011 vehicle rental
companies in the region
numbered
63 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Regional Boards
2011
Southeast
Vehicle fleet 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Espírito Santo 6,090 6,255 7,006 7,950 8,500 9,100 9,900Minas Gerais 28,960 33,145 37,454 42,327 45,559 52,028 56,913Rio de Janeiro 19,365 22,936 26,147 28,762 33,076 52,200 58,000Greater São Paulo 66,996 75,324 85,116 93,628 106,657 115,568 126,050São Paulo State (not including Greater São Paulo)
21,087 23,875 26,501 29,881 32,820 37,308 39,333
Total 142,498 161,535 182,224 202,548 226,612 266,204 290,196
Number of rental companies 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Espírito Santo 94 97 82 82 89 91 108Minas Gerais 201 213 220 220 216 219 225Rio de Janeiro 131 128 117 117 118 119 125Greater São Paulo 312 301 250 246 225 225 216São Paulo State (not including Greater São Paulo)
151 149 194 192 179 179 161
Total 889 888 863 857 827 833 835
Márcio Castelo
Branco GonçalvesEspírito Santo
Leonardo Soares
Nogueira SilvaMinas Gerais
Mauro Roberto
Alves RibeiroMinas Gerais
Gustavo do Carmo
AzevedoRio de Janeiro
Flávio GerduloGreater São Paulo
Marcelo Ribeiro
FernandesSão Paulo State
(not including Greater São Paulo)
Eládio Paniagua Jr.Greater São Paulo
290,196
835
In 2011 vehicle rental
companies in the region
numbered
In 2011 vehicle rental
companies in the region
numbered
64 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Regional Boards
2011
South
Valmor WeissParaná
Félix PeterRio Grande do Sul
Marco Antonio Ramos GomesSanta Catarina
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Paraná 98 103 110 110 116 118 121Rio Grande do Sul 133 129 109 109 121 124 126Santa Catarina 88 93 95 95 102 106 97
Total 319 325 314 314 339 348 344
Number of rental companies
44,725
344
In 2011 the vehicle fleet in the region
numbered
In 2011 vehicle rental
companies in the region
numbered
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Paraná 14,930 15,500 17,050 20,144 26,340 28,448 30,733Rio Grande do Sul 8,520 7,983 8,861 10,103 11,113 11,240 9,800Santa Catarina 2,560 2,591 2,902 3,279 3,910 4,111 4,192
Total 26,010 26,074 28,813 33,526 41,363 43,799 44,725
Vehicle fleet
65 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Automakers
Fiat
Cledorvino BeliniPresident
Lélio RamosCommercial Director Paulo Eduardo Sorge
Director of Direct Sales
The Fiat car assembly line, in Betim (MG), is considered by the company to be one of the largest
automobile factories in the world. It covers 675,700 square meters of built-on area and is able to produce 800,000
vehicles per year, operating three shifts.The automaker’s history in Brazil can be divided into
two parts. The first began with the opening of the factory in 1976, and production of the 147 model.
In the mid-1980s, the brand became more modern with the Uno (in 1984), starting a new stage in the country. The
car became the basis for several innovations - In 1990 it was launched with a 1 liter engine; in 1992 it was launched
in four-door format, the first in the segment in Brazil. The car was then equipped with monopoint electronic injection
(1992) and multipoint injection (1993).The Palio was launched in 1996, to replace the Uno,
as it was claimed at the time. However, both models continued to enjoy strong demand and are currently among
the five biggest-selling cars in Brazil.
00 55 31 2123-2111www.fiat.com.br
66 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Automakers
Volks
wage
n
Volkswagen is the largest vehicle manufacturer in Brazil. Operating in the country since 1953, it currently has four plants: São Bernardo do Campo (SP), Taubaté (SP), São Carlos (SP), and São José dos Pinhais (PR). It employs about 24,000 people in Brazil and the Volkswagen Foundation is responsible for its major investments in social programs.
It has the largest range of products on the domestic market and produces the Gol, Gol GIV, Voyage, Fox, CrossFox, SpaceFox, Parati, Saveiro, Polo, Polo Sedan, Golf and Kombi models, besides its line of imported vehicles. It has sold over 19 million vehicles produced in the country and has 618 dealerships around Brazil.
Thomas SchmallPresident
Jutta DierksVice President of Sales and Marketing
Alberto AndradeCorporate Sales Manager
00 55 11 4347-2355www.volkswagen.com.br
67 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Automakers
Alberto AndradeCorporate Sales Manager
Gene
ral M
otors
Santiago Chamorro
Director-General of MKT, Sales and
After Sales
Ronaldo ZnidarsisDirect-General of Sales and Marketing
Grace LiebleinPresident
General Motors do Brasil began its operations in the country in 1925, importing disassembled vehicles to finish
them in its unit in São Paulo (SP). As a manufacturer of vehicles for the local market
the company made its debut in 1930, opening the plant in São Caetano (SP), where it still has its headquarters.Its determination to remain in the country regardless
of political or economic circumstances has allowed the company to keep up continuous growth. Over the years
it has built other plants to meet demand. Today the company has assembly linesin São Caetano do Sul (SP), Sao Jose
dos Campos (SP) and Gravatái (RS). It also has stamped component production units in Mogi das Crosses (SP), a Logistics Center in Sorocaba (SP) and testing tracks in Indaiatuba (SP), as well as a Engineering and Design Technology Center in São Caetano do
Sul. It is the third-largest GM operation outside the United States.
In recent years it has been vying for car sales leadership in Brazil and has achieved it
in some municipalities.
00 55 11 4234-7700www.chevrolet.com.br
68 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Automakers
Rena
ult
Everything indicates that when Renault decided to move
to Brazil it had no intention of analyzing its initial performance as a basis for future investment. On the contrary, the horizontal growth schedule had already been decided on. This is what can be deduced from the company’s expansion in the country, which was fast enough to open three plants in just three years.
It all started with the car plant in São José dos Pinhais (PR) in 1998. The following year the engine plant was opened, followed in 2001 by the commercial vehicle plant. In between times, the company invested and opened its new spare parts central warehouse, in 2001.
The importance of the Brazilian unit can be illustrated by the fact that it was chosen by the headquarters to have the Renault Technology Americas center (RTA) and the Renault Design Latin America center (RDAL). These two engineering and design centers develop products for the Latin American consumer profile.
The plant produces the Duster, Grand Tour, Logan, Sandero and Sandero Stepway models. The commercial vehicle plant is responsible for the Renault Master line. The engine plant also produces crankshafts.
00 55 41 3880-2000www.renault.com.br
Alexandre OliveiraDirector of Direct Sales
Olivier Murguet President
69 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Automakers
Ford
Early in the twentieth century businesspeople and governments said nothing about globalization, but Henry Ford, the founder of the automaker that took his surname, began to expand the business a few years after opening his first factory, in the United States, in 1904.
Brazil is part of the story. After all, the car with which the company changed the concept of automobile production and popularized it worldwide, the Model T, was also assembled in this country as of 1919. The automaker imported the vehicle in parts from the United States to finish it at its unit in São Paulo.
A great push for growth came in 1953, the year that saw the opening of the industrial complex in Ipiranga and the acquisition of the Willys Overland.
In the 93 years it has been in Brazil, Ford has produced millions of cars, trucks, SUVs, off-road vehicles and even tractors. It currently assembles cars and trucks in the country.
It has plants in São Bernardo do Campo (SP), Camaçari (BA) and Taubaté (SP). The company also has a testing track in Tatuí (SP) and owns the Troller brand, with a plant in Horizonte (CE).
Ford is considered to be one of the big four automakers on the Brazilian market.
Steven ArmstrongPresident
Jorge ChearDirector of Sales
and Marketing
00 55 11 4174-8855www.ford.com.br
70 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Automakers
PSa P
euge
ot Cit
roën
In 2001 the first PSA - Peugeot Citroën vehicles rolled off the assembly line in Porto Real (RJ), concluding a plan to produce in Brazil announced in 1998. Previously, the cars had been imported.
The model chosen to begin production was the Citroen Picasso, with a 2.0-liter engine. Soon afterwards, the plant began to manufacture the Peugeot 206 as well, with a 1.0 liter engine.
Gradually the Brazilian plant began to produce other cars. In 2003, for example, it began production of the Citroën C3, and in 2004 the 206 SW, from Peugeot. And in 2008 Peugeot launched the 207, the brand’s first vehicle developed entirely in Brazil.
The production lines in Porto Real now manufacture not only cars but also 1.4 and 1.6 liter flex-fuel and gasoline engines. As regards the vehicles, it produces the C3, C3 Picasso, Aircross and Xsara Picasso, from Citroën, and the 207, 207 SW, 207 Passion and the Hoggar models, from Peugeot.
One of the PSA group’s goals is to expand annual production capacity from 160,000 vehicles a year to 300,000 by 2015, and 400,000 engines (its current capacity is 280,000 units).00 55 21 3506-4900
www.psa-peugeot-citroen.com.br
Frédéric DrouinGeneral Director
João Paulo ToscanoCorporate Sales General Manager
Francesco AbbruzzesiGeneral Director
Gustavo WalchCorporate SalesDirector
71 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Automakers
Toyo
taThe Corolla and Hilux are the biggest-
selling Toyota models in Brazil today. However, the company’s relationship with the country is long-standing. It began on January 23, 1958, at the opening an office in downtown São Paulo, and continued with the opening of a factory in November of that year, also in the city of São Paulo.
The first Toyota to be made by the brand in Brazil was launched in 1959. It was a utility vehicle called Land Cruiser. In 1962 the company moved the plant to São Bernardo do Campo (SP) and made a change - it removed the old car from the line and added the Bandeirante, in jeep and pickup versions.
Shunichi NakanishiPresident
Rubens Cezar Freire de OliveiraDirect Sales Manager
Horácio Eduardo de Oliveira PintoNational Direct Sales Manager
00 55 11 5502-9100www.toyota.com.br
72 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Automakers
Niss
an
A car plant in Resende (RJ) will continue Nissan’s expansion in Brazil. The company has announced it will invest R$ 2.6 billion in the facilities, whose production capacity will be 200,000 vehicles per year. The work is scheduled to begin in the first half of 2014.
The history of Nissan in Brazil goes back one decade. In 2002 the brand opened an assembly line in São José dos Pinhais (PR) at the Renault plant (a
company it has a partnership with) to make the pickup Frontier. Later it added the
Livina minivan. Currently the factory produces several versions of these two vehicles.
Recently the company announced ambitious targets in
Brazil: to win a market share of at least 5% on the Brazilian market by
2016. The newly launched smaller models − March and Versa − are part of its armory. Among its strategies is an increased number of dealers, from 135 to 239 across the country, and the launch of ten new models the the next four years.
00 55 41 3380-2000www.nissan.com.br
Christian MeunierPresident
Abelardo PintoDirector of Sales
Carlos AraújoDirector of Direct Sales
73 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Automakers
Hond
a
Sérgio BessaDirect-General of Sales and Marketing
Masahiro TakedagawaPresident
When Honda Automóveis began selling imported cars in Brazil, in 1992, the brand was already well-known. That year its motorcycle plant − which had been in the country since 1976 − made 1.5 million units. To increase the company’s market share HTA was set up to produce scooters, power generators, and steel packaging, and also to assemble motorcycle components.
In the two-wheel segment, at the beginning of the 1990s, the assembler was the leader, with a market share of more than 70%
In a favorable scenario for the brand and satisfactory sales, Japanese executives decided to create a separate company to deal with cars produced locally. This led to the creation of Honda Automóveis do Brasil in 1996. The following year the company began producing the Civic at the plant in Sumaré (SP).
The plant currently covers 168,000 square meters of built-on area, on land measuring 1.7 million square meters, where it produces the Fit and City models. More sophisticated models are still imported today.
00 55 11 5576-5122www.honda.com.br
74 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Automakers
Kia
In 2011 Kia’s sales grew by nearly 50% in Brazil on 2010. If the brand is now consolidated, it is thanks to the perseverance of José Luiz Gandini, president da Kia Motors do Brasil. The company was set up in 1992, and the following year began importing the pickup,Ceres, and the van, Besta.
In 1997, when it was well-known and the network had grown (it had 100 dealers), the market heard that the headquarters was on the verge of bankruptcy. This news began a slide that culminated in the mass closure of dealerships. Only 33 remained in business.
Soon the company was nationalized by the South Korean government, and was then acquired by Hyundai in 1999, and stabilized. José Luiz Gandini closely monitored all these goings on without giving up on his goal.
On the way to stability and growth, Kia do Brasil regained the headquarters’ prize as Regional Distributor of the Year, in 2000 and 2010 (it had won it previously in 1997).
It currently has 160 dealers and sells the Carens, Carnival, Sportage, Sorento, Mohave, Bongo, Cerato, Cadenza and Picanto models.
Gandini now plans to build a factory in Brazil.
Ary Jorge RibeiroDirector of Sales
00 55 0800-7711011www.kiamotors.com.br
José Luiz GandiniPresident
José Vital NogueiraDirector of After Sales
75 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Automakers
Hyun
dai
Carlos Alberto Oliveira Andrade
President
‘Excelling’ sums up the history of Hyundai in Brazil. In the early 1990s, senior managers from South Korean chose the Garavelo group as a partner, a company that operated in different segments, but which was outstanding in consortium sales, appliance stores, and as a dealer for another vehicle brand.
However, when the automaker was preparing to climb the sales ranking, its partner faced problems: the Central Bank intervened in its consortium sales and bank, and it went bankrupt, impacting Hyundai’s strategy in the country.
The automaker got back on track in 1999 after signing a partnership with businessman Carlos Alberto Oliveira, the owner of the Caoa group, with many years of experience in the automotive retail segment. The brand’s strong performance with its imported vehicles led to an agreement to set up an industrial operation in Brazil. In 2007 the factory was opened in Anápolis (GO), to produce the utility vehicle RH. In 2009 the plant opened the Tucson assembly line, and in 2011 it began making the HD78 truck. The factory produces 70,000 cars a year - but has a capacity to produce 130,000 vehicles a year.
00 55 11 5538-1000www.hyundai-motors.com.br
76 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Automakers
Mitsu
bishi
Fernando MatarazzoCommercial Director
00 55 11 5694-2700www.mitsubishimotors.com.br
Robert RittscherPresident
After getting permission to build aMitsubishi plant with their own resources to
produce the L200 pickup, businessmen EduardoSouza Ramos and Paulo Ferraz rethought the profile
of the vehicle’s consumers in Brazil.They decided that it would not be the same
as in Japan, where the L200 was used incargo transportation. Here it would be known as a
sophisticated vehicle.With this repositioning in mind, they made
changes to the vehicle, among which were a greater ground-clearance, wide, chromed wheels, side stripes,
leather seats and other interior details.According to the businesspeople, at the opening of
the plant and the introduction of the Brazilian Mitsubishi in 1989, the Japanese executives were
surprised to see their valiant and hardworking Mitsubishi L200 turned into an object of
consumer desire on the luxury market.Later, the plant, in Catalão (GO), started
producing the Pajero TR4 Flex and Pajero Dakar, as well, competition-line vehicles used for
rally events. Investment is being made to expand capacity and
produce 100,000 vehicles a year.
77 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Automakers
MaN
José Ricardo AloucheDirector of Sales, Marketing and After Sales
Antonio Cammarosano FilhoCommercial Director
Cid Mário ManechiniManager of Commercial Operations and Special Orders
Antonio Roberto CortesPresident
Ranked among the largest truck manufacturing groups in the world, MAN, based in Germany, began operating in Brazil in 2009 - but it started out
big, acquiring Volkswagen Trucks and Buses and creating MAN Latin America. Currently the
company operates in Brazil under both brands.With a consolidated platform in Brazil it is recognized for
innovations, such as the Modular Consortium and the Made-to-Measure Concept. The former is production format which includes
suppliers in the same physical space as the assembler.Made-to-Measure is a concept for a segmented truck, starting
from the observation that one vehicle cannot be completely identical to another one, simply because the needs of one client are not identical to those of another one. In this way the company has grown continuously.
On turning 30 years of age, it has won over customers in Braziland more than 30 other countries in Latin America,
the Middle East and Africa.In 2012, MAN Latin America announced an investment of morethan R$ 1 billion to increase the supply of commercial vehicles
under the Volkswagen and MAN brands. The company intends to operate in niches of the market that are as yet unexplored and to increase
production capacity at its plant in Resende.
Total sales 50,829Direct sales 13,777Sales in the lease sector 1,980
Units sold - 2011
78 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Automakers
Ford
Cami
nhõe
sSteven ArmstrongPresident
Oswaldo JardimDirector of Operations
In 1956, Brazil’s President Juscelino Kubitschek launched a set of economic measures called the Target Plan. Under the slogan “Fifty years of progress in five years of government,” he encouraged industrialization. In the following years several companies sett up in the country.
However, one year before the Target Plan, Ford Caminhões, which had been in Brazil since 1923 making CKD kits of a commercial vehicle derived from the Model T, in São Paulo, began producing cabins made with Brazilian steel, marking the beginning of its domestic automotive production program.
The first Brazilian-made truck (the F-600 V8) rolled off the assembly line in 1957, with 40% of it made in Brazil. In 1958, the company started making V8 engines for the F-350 medium-sized truck, launched in 1959.
The following years saw many new launches. However, the 1980s were when the Cargo Line arrived (1985), the first global Ford truck. In 2001, the company began production in São Bernardo do Campo (SP). Currently this is one of most productive truck plants in Brazil, producing 22 units an hour.
In 2011, Ford Caminhões introduced the New Cargo line, a global vehicle whose development had been driven by Brazilian engineering. Consisting of 11 models, it offers advances in the cabin, its more productive, safer and comfortable.
In 2012 all the Cargo trucks are prepared to comply with Proconve P7 legislation.
Total sales 30,348Direct sales 8,939Sales in the lease sector 497
Units sold - 2011
80 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Partners
ABAC – Associação Brasileira das Administradoras de Consórcios
Rua Avanhandava, 126. 5° andar,01306-01, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3231-5022 Fax (00 55) (11) 3258-2064
www.abac.org.br | [email protected]
ABAG – Associação Brasileira de Agribusiness
Av. Paulista 1754. 14° andar, Conj. 147 e 148, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3285-3100www.abagbrasil.com.br
ABAV – Associação Brasileira dasAgencias de Viagens
Avenida São Luiz, 165 1° andar, Conj. 1BRepública
01046-001, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 3231-3077 Fax (00 55) (11) 3259-8327
www.abav.com.br | [email protected]
ABBTUR – Associação Brasileira deBacharéis em Turismo
Rua Consolação Pinto Ferreira, 275, Caiçara, 30750-420, Belo Horizonte/MG, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (31) 3412-8979 Fax (00 55) (31) 3411-8796
www.abbtur.org.br | [email protected]
ABEIVA – Associação Brasileira das Empresas Importadoras de Veículos
Rua Dr. Renato Paes de Barros, 717Conj. 113, 11° andar. Itaim Bibi, 04530-001, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (11) 3078-3989 | Fax (11) 3168-2348www.abeiva.com.br | [email protected]
ABEL – Associação Brasileira dasEmpresas de Leasing
Rua Diogo Moreira, 132. 8° andar, Conj. 806. Pinheiros,
05423-010, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 3095-9100 Fax (00 55) (11) 3095-9105
ABEOC - Associação Brasileira deEmpresas de Eventos
Rua Feliciano Nunes Pires, 35 TérreoCentro
88015-220, Florianópolis/SC, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 2935-9866
www.abeoc.org.br | [email protected]
ABESA - Associação Brasileira das Empresas de Serviços de Assitência 24hs
Calc Margaridas, 70 cj 3Centro Comercial Barueri/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) [email protected]
ABETAR - Associação Brasileira das Empresas de TranSP, Brazilorte Aéreo
RegionalSAUS qd 01 bl J 5º andar Ed. CNT
70070-944, Brasília/DF, BrazilTel. (00 55) (61) 3322-2993
www.abetar.com.br | [email protected]
ABGEV – Associação Brasileira deGestores de Viagens Corporativas
Av. Brigadeiro Faria Lima, 2369.Jardim Paulistano
01452-000, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 5181-3237 Fax (00 55) (11) 5181-3237
www.abgev.org.br | [email protected]
Braz
ilian e
ntitie
s
81 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Partners
ABIH – Associação Brasileira daIndústria de Hotéis
SCN Qd 01 Bl F SI, 1713 - 17º andarEd. America Office Tower
70711-905 Brasília/DF, BrazilTel. (00 55) (61) 3326-1177www.abihnacional.com.br [email protected]
ABIMAQ – Associação Brasileira daInd. de Máquinas e Equipamentos
Av. Jabaquara, 295São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 5582-6311www.abimaq.org.br
ABOTTC - Associação Brasileira das Operadoras de Trens Turísticos e Culturais
Rua Cosmeselia, 51322241-090, Rio de Janeiro/RJ, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (21) 2558-1329 Ramal 202www.abottc.com.br
ABRAC – Associação Brasileira deConcessionárias Chevrolet
Avenida Dr. Arnaldo, 2012, Sumaré01255-000, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3872-1800 Fax (00 55) (11) 3872-9202
www.abrac.com.br | [email protected]
ABRACAF – Associação Brasileira dos Concessionários de Automóveis Fiat
Rua Itápolis, 543. Pacaembu,01245-000, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3661-9922 Fax (00 55) (11) 3661-8666
www.abracaf.com.br | [email protected]
ABRACCEF – Associação Brasileira de Centros de Convenções e Feiras
Rua Benjamin Constant,67, 6º andar Conj. 601 Centro
80060-020, Curitiba/PR, BrazilTel. (00 55) (41) 3039-9236 Fax (00 55) (41) 3013-1334
[email protected]/direct
ABRACICLO – Associação Brasileira dos Fabricantes de Motocicletas, Ciclomotores,
Motonetas, Bicicletas e SimilaresRua Américo Brasiliense, 2171.
Conj. 907 a 910. São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 5181-0222
www.abraciclo.com.br
ABRADIF – Associação Brasileirade Distribuidores Ford
Avenida Indianópolis, 529.04063-900, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 5088-7788 Fax (00 55) (11) 5088-7792
ABRAMET – Associação Brasileira de Medicina de Tráfego
Rua Dr. Amâncio de Carvalho, 50704012-090, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 2137-2700www.abramet.org.br
ABRACORP - Associação Brasileira das Agências de Viagens Coorporativas
Av. Dr Vieira de Carvalho nº 115 8º andar. Republica
1210-010, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 2626-9692 Fax (00 55) (41) 3013-1334
ABRADIT - Associação Brasileira dos Distribuidores Toyota
Av. Eng. Luís Carlos Berrini, 1511Brooklin Novo
04571-011 - São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 5504-5504
www.abradit.org.br | [email protected]
ABRAJET – Associação Brasileira deJornalistas de Turismo
Rua 07 de Abril, 127 1º andar Conj. 1101043-930, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 2959-5058 | 3255-2041www.abrajet.com.br | [email protected]
ABRARE - Associação Brasileira dos Concessionários RenaultAv. Indianópolis, 1967 - Sala 5
04063-003, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 5582-0039 Fax (00 55) (11) 5594-8504
www.abrare.com.br | abrare@ abrare.com.br
ABRASEL - Associação Brasileira de Bares e Restaurantes
Rua Bambui, 20 Bairro Serra30210-490, Belo Horizonte/MG, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (31) 2512-1622 /1624 /3138 www.abrasel.com.br
82 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Partners
ABREMAR - Associação Brasileira de Representantes de Empresas Marítimas
Alameda Lorena nº 800 Conj 401 4º andar Jardim Paulista
01424-001, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 3337 5000
www.abremar.com.br [email protected]
ABRATI – Associação Brasileira das Empresas de TranSP, Brazilorte
Terrestre de PassageirosSAUS, Quadra 1, Bloco J , Edifício CNT,
8° andar, Entrada 10/20, Torre A. 7007-944, Brasília/DF, BrazilTel. (00 55) (61) 3322-2004 Fax (00 55) (61) 3322-2022
www.abrati.org.br [email protected]
ABRAVO – Associação Brasileira dosDistribuidores Volvo
Rua Visconde do Rio Branco, 1310. Conj. 2180420-210, Curitiba/PR, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (41) 3301-8888 Fax (00 55) (41) 3301-8888
ABRESI – Associação Brasileirade Gastronomia, HoSP, Braziledagem
e TurismoLargo do Arouche, 290, 9° Andar.01219-010, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3327-2086 Fax (00 55) (11) 3324-0228
www.abresi.com.br [email protected]
ABREVIS – Associação Brasileira das Empresas de Segurança e VigilânciaRua Bernardino Fanganielo, 691, 1° andar
Casa Verde02512-000, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3858-7360 Fax (00 55) (11) 3858-7360www.abrevis-seg.com.br
ABRIVE – Associação Brasileiradas Reparadoras Independentes
de VeículosAvenida Indianópolis, 2343.
04063-004, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 5589-7722 Fax (00 55) (11) 5584-8090
ADIBRA – Associação das Empresas de Parques de Diversões do Brasil
Rua Quirino dos Santos, 271, sala 86 01141-020, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3392-2312Fax (00 55) (11) 3392-2312
www.adibra.com.br | [email protected]
ABECS – Associação Brasileira das Empresas de Cartões de Crédito e Serviços
Av. Brig. Faria Lima, 1485, 13°and. Torre Norte
Jardim Paulistano, 01452-921, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3244-9930 Fax (00 55) (11) 3244-9930
www.abecs.org.br | [email protected]
AEA – Associação Brasileirade Engenharia Automotiva
Rua Salvador Correia, 80, Aclimação04109-070, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 5575-9043www.aea.org.br
AMITuR - Associação dos Municípios de Interesse Cultural e Turístico
Santiago Dantas 215, MorumbiSão Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3758-0142www.amitur.org.br
amitur.SP, [email protected]
ANAC - Agência Nacional de Aviação CivilSCS 09, Lote C
Ed. Parque Cidade Corporate - Torre A70308-200, Brasília/DF, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (61) 0800 725 4445www.anac.gov.br | [email protected]
ANDAP – Associação Nacional dosDistribuidores de Autopeças
Avenida Paulista, 1009, 1° andar. Conj. 101. 01311-100, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3266-7700 Fax (00 55) (11) 3266-7700
www.andap.org.br [email protected]
ANEF – Associação Nacional das Empresas Financeiras das Montadoras
Alameda dos Maracatins, 992 Bloco B, 11°andar, Conj. 112B - Moema
04089-001, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 5531-7314 Fax (00 55) (11) 5531-7314
www.anef.com.br [email protected]
83 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Partners
ANFAVEA – Associação Nacional dos Fabricantes de Veículos Automotores
Avenida Indianópolis, 496.04062-900, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 2193-7800 Fax (00 55) (11) 2193-7825
ASSESP, BrazilRO – Associação das Empresas Brasileiras de Tecnologia da
Informação, Software e Internet
Rua Teodoro Sampaio, 417, 3°andar, Conj. 33. 05405-000, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3064-0003 Fax (00 55) (11) 3064-0003
ASSOBRAV – Associação Brasileira deDistribuidores Volkswagen
Avenida José Maria Withaker, 603.05057-900, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 5078-5400 Fax (00 55) (11) 5079-5199
ASSOHONDA - Associação Brasileira de Distribuidores Honda
Alameda dos Jurupis 455 2º andar - Moema04088-001, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 5054-7733 www.assohonda.org.br
BITO - Associação Brasileira de Operadores de Turismo
[email protected]@gbinternacional.com.br
Brasília Convention & Visitors BureauSCN, Qd 01, Bl C
Ed. Trade Center SL 2004/200770711-902,Brasília/DF, BrazilTel. (00 55) (61) 3328-1468
BRAZTOA – Associação Brasileiradas Operadoras de Turismo
Avenida Ipiranga, 324. Bloco C, 14°andar Republica
01046-010, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 3259-9500 Fax (00 55) (11) 3255-1226
www.braztoa.com.br [email protected]
CBC & VB – Confederação Brasileira de Convention & Visitors BureauxSCN, Quadra 01, Bloco F, Sala 1020
Ed. América Office Tower70711-905 Brasília/DF, BrazilTel. (00 55) (61) 3966-9400 Fax (00 55) (61) 3966-9400
www.cbcvb.org.br [email protected]
CNC – Confederação Nacional do Comércio de Bens, Serviços e TurismoAv. General Justo, 307 - Centro
20021-130 Rio de Janeiro/RJ, BrazilTel. (00 55) (21) 3804-9200
(00 55) (21) 2544-9279www.cnc.org.br
CNT – Confederação Nacional do TranSP, Brazilorte
SAUS Quadra 1, Bloco J. EdifícioCNT, 13° andar, Entrada 10/20.70070-944 , Brasília/DF, BrazilTel. (00 55) (61) 3315-7000 Fax (00 55) (61) 3225-3416
EMBRATuR – Instituto Brasileiro de TurismoSetor Comercial Norte, quadra 02,
Bloco G. Edifício Embratur.70712-907, Brasília/DF, BrazilTel. (00 55) (61) 2023-8888
FAVECC – Fórum das Agências de Viagens ESP, Brazilecializadas em Contas ComerciaisRua Dr. Bráulio Gomes, 25, Conj. 305, 3°andar.
01047-020, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 3214-2535 Fax (00 55) (11) 3129-4275
FEBRABAN – Federação Brasileira das Associações de Bancos
Avenida Faria Lima, 1485. 14°andar.01452-921, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3244-9800 Fax (00 55) (11) 3031-4106
www.febraban.org.br | [email protected]
FECOMERCIO – Federação do Comércio do Estado de São Paulo
Rua Dr. Plínio Barreto, 285, Bela Vista, 01313-020, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3254-1700 Fax (00 55) (11) 3254-1700
Federação Bras. de Conventions & Visitors Bureaux
SCN Qd 01, Bl csl 2004/2007Ed.Brasilia Trade Center
70711-905 Brasília/DF, BrazilTel. (00 55) (61) 3202-5579
84 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Partners
Federação Brasileira de HoSP, Braziledagem e Alimentação
Praia do Flamenfo 200 4º andar22210-901 Rio de Janeiro/RJ, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (21) 2558-2630www.fbha.com.br
FENABRAVE – Federação Nacional da Distribuição de Veículos Automotores
Avenida Indianópolis, 7967.04062-003, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 5082-0033 Fax (00 55) (11) 5082-0001
www.fenabrave.org.br [email protected]
FENACTuR – Federação Nacional de TurismoLargo do Arouche, 290. 6°andar.01219-010, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3331-4590 Fax (00 55) (11) 3221-6947
www.fenactur.com.br | [email protected]
FENASEG – Federação das Empresas de Seguros Privados
Rua Senador Dantas, 74, 12°andar. Centro, 20031-205, Rio de Janeiro/RJ, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (21) 2510-7777 Fax (00 55) (21) 2510-7832
www.fenaseg.org.br | [email protected]
FIESP, Brazil - Federação das Indústrias do Estado de São Paulo
Av. Paulista, 1313, 01311-923 São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3549-4499 www.fieSP, Brazil.com.br
relacionamento@fieSP, Brazil.org.br
FOHB - Fórum de Operadores Hoteleiros do Brasil
Alameda Lorena, 800 Conj. 502 Jardim Paulista
01424-001 São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 3527-9484 Fax (00 55) (11) 3527-9485
IPETuRIS - Instituto de Pesquisas, Estudos e
Capacitação em TurismoAv. Dr. Vieria de Carvalho, 115 11º Andar
Vila Buarque01210-010 São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3069.9484www.ipeturis.org.br
IQA – Instituto de Qualidade AutomotivaAl. dos Nhambiquaras, 1509
São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 5533-4545
www.iqa.org.br
Ministério do TurismoESP, Brazillanada dos ministérios, Bloco U,
2°e 3°andares. 70065-900, Brasília/DF, BrazilTel. (00 55) (61) 2023-7024 Fax (00 55) (61) 2023-7024
www.turismo.gov.br
NTC & LOGISTICA – Associação Nacional do TranSP, Brazilorte de Carga e Logística
Rua Orlando Monteiro,1. São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (11) 2632-1500
www.ntcelogistica.org.br
NTu – Associação Nacional dasEmpresas de TranSP, Brazilortes urbanosSAUS Quadra 1, Bloco J. Ed. CNT, 9° andar
Brasília/DF, BrazilTel. (00 55) (61) 2103-9293
www.ntu.org.br
SAE BrasilAv. Paulista, 2073. Horsa II, Conj. 1003
São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 3287-2033
www.saebrasil.org.br
SP, BrazilTuRIS – São Paulo Turismo S/AAvenida Olavo Fontoura, 1209.
Parque Anhembi. Santana,02012-021, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 2226-0400/0646www.anhembi.com.br
www.SP, Brazilturis.comrcomini@SP, Brazilturis.com
SEBRAE – Serviço Brasileiro de Apoio as Micro e Pequenas Empresas
SEPN, Quadra 515, Bloco C, Lote 3,Asa Norte,
70770-900, Brasília/DFTel. (00 55) 0800 570 0800
www.sebrae.com.br
85 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Partners
SENAC - Serviço Nacional de Aprendizagem Comercial
Rua Dr. Plinio Barreto, 285 - Bela Vista01313-020, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3236-2000www.senac.br
SIMEFRE – Sindicato Interestadual da Industria de Matérias e Equipamentos
Ferroviários e RodoviáriosAv. Paulista, 1313. 8° andar, Conj. 801
São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 3289-9166
www.simefre.org.br
SINDEPAT – Sistema Integrado Atrações Turísticas
Rua Verbo Divino, 431.04719-001, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 5181-0860 Fax (00 55) (11) 5181-0860
SINDIPEÇAS – Sindicato Nacional daIndústria de Componentes para
Veículos AutomotoresAv. Santo Amaro, 1386. Vila Nova Conceição,
São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 3848-4848 Fax (00 55) (11) 3848-0900
SINDETuR – Sindicato das Empresasde Turismo do Estado de São Paulo
Rua Dr. Vieira de Carvalho, 115. 11° and. 01210-010, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3224-8544 Fax (00 55) (11) 3331-6115
www.sindeturSP, [email protected]
SINDIPROM - Sindicato de Empresas de Promoção, Organização e
Montagem de Feiras, Congressos e EventosRua Frei Caneca, 91. 11° and. 01307-001
Cerqueira César, São Paulo/SP, Brazilwww.sindprom.org.br
SNEA - Sindicato Nacional dasEmpresas Aeroviárias
SCS QD 01 Bloco K sala 70110398-900, Brasília/DF, Brazil
uBRAFE – união Brasileira dosPromotores de Feiras
Rua Frei Caneca, 91. 11° and. Cerqueira Cesar, 01307-001, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3120-7099 Fax (00 55) (11) 3120-7099
www.ubrafe.org.br | [email protected]
ÚNICA – união da Indústria deCana de Açúcar
Av. Brigadeiro Faria Lima, 2179. 9° andarSão Paulo – SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3093-4949www.unica.com.br
86 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Partners
Inter
natio
nal
entit
ies
ANPACT – Asociación Nacional de Productores de Autobuses, Camiones y
TractocamionesPaseo de lãs Palmas, 1650.
Col. Lomas de Chapultepec – México-DFTel. (55) 5202-4900www.anpac.com.mx
ARAC – Associação dos Industriais de Aluguer de Automóveis Sem Condutor
Avenida 5 de Outubro, 70. 9° andar.1050-059, Lisboa – PortugalTel. 00 xx 351 (21) 761-5230Tel. 00 xx 351 (21) 761-5231www.arac.pt | [email protected]
AuTOALLIANCE – Autoallianceof Automobile Manufacturers1401 Eye Street, n.w Suíte 900.
Washington, DC – EUATel. (202) 326-5500
www.autoalliance.org
CAAM – China Association ofAutomobile Manufacturers46, Fucheng Road, Haidian.
Beijing – ChinaTel. (86) 10 6812-3210
www.caam.org.cn
CCFA – Comite Des ConstructeursFrançais d’Automoniles
2, Rue de Presbourg. Paris – FrançaTel. (33) 1 4952-5100
www.ccfa.fr
CIT - Câmara Interamericana De TransportesSAS - Quadra 1 - Bloco J - Ed. CNT
Torre A - 7º Andar - Sala 70270070-010 - Brasília – DF - Brasil
Telefax: (55 61) 3225-0055 / [email protected] / [email protected]
www.citamericas.org/
CVMA – Canadian VehicleManufactures’s Association
170 Attwell Driv, Suite 400.Toronto – Canadá
Tel. (416) 361-9333www.cvma.ca
European Federation of Leasing and Automotive
Rental AssociationAvenue de Tervuren, 267 B, 1150.
Brussels – BelgicaTel. 00 xx 32 2778-0560Tel. 00 xx 32 2778-0578
JAMA – Japan automobileManufacturers Association
Otemachi Bldg, 6-1,Otemachi 1-chome, Chiyoda-ku,
Tóquio – JapãoTel. (81) 5219-6653
www.jama.or.jp
KAMA – Korean AutomobileManufacturers Association
1461-15, Seocho-3dong,Sepcho-gu, Seul – Coréia do Sul
Tel. (82) 3660-1853www.kama.or.kr
NAAMSA – National Associationof Automobile Manufacturers
of South Africa1st floor of Nedbank Plaza, corner
of Church and Beatrix Streets,Pretoria – África do Sul
Tel. (27) 323-2980www.naamsa.co.za
OICA – Organization of MotorVehicle Manufacturers
4 rue de Berri. Paris – FrançaTel. (33) 1 4359-0013
www.oica.net
SMMT – Society of MotorsManufacturers and TradersForbes House, Halkin Street
London – Reino UnidoTel. (440) 171-235-7000
www.smmt.co.uk
VDA – Verba Der Automobilindustrie
Westendstrasse, 61. Postfach.Frankfurt – AlemanhaTel. (49) 6997-5070
www.vda.de
ACEA – European AutomobileManufacturer’s Association
Avenue des Nerviens, 85.Brussels, Bélgica
Tel. (00 32) 2 732-5550www.cea.be
ACRA – American Car Rental Association12324 E. 86TH ST, 130.
Owasso, Cep. 740552543,Oklahoma – EUA
Tel. 888-200-2795www.acraorg.com
ADEFA – Asociación de Fábricasde Automotores
Av. Marcelo T. de Alvear, 638,piso 5. Buenos Aires – Argentina
Tel. (11) 4312-3483www.adefa.com.ar
AMIA – Asociación Mexicana da la Industria AutomotrizEnseada, 90. Col. Condesa,Del. Cuauhtémoc. México
Tel. (55) 5272-1144www.amia.com.mx
ANFAC – Asociación Españolade Fabricantes de Automoviles
y CamionesFray Bernardino Sahagun, 24,
Madrid - EspanhaGarcia Sanz
Tel. (34) 1 343-1343www.anfac.com
ANFIA – Associazione Nazionale FraIndutrie AutomobilisticheCorso Galileo Ferraris, 61.
Torino – ItaliaTel. (39) 11 554-6505
www.anfia.it
Comm
itted
De
alers
Agrale S.A.Rodovia BR 116, Km 145, nº 15.104 - São Ciro
95059-520, Caxias do Sul/RS, BrazilTel. (00 55) 54 3238-8000 Fax (00 55) 54 3238-8052
www.agrale.com.br
Audi Brasil DistribuidoraR. Verbo Divino, 1547, 4º andar
04719-002, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) 11 3041.2834/2930
0800-777-2834www.audi.com.br
87 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Partners
Citroën do BrasilRua James Joule, 65 – 8º andar04576-080, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel: (00 55) (11) [email protected]
www.citroen.com.br
Chery BrasilRua Novik , 221 - Bloco A, Olaria
13329-620, Salto/SP, Brazil Tel. (00 55) (11) (11) 4028-8500
www.cherybrasil.com.br
CN-AutoRua João Ferreira Camargo, 226
06460-060, Tambore, Sao Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) (11) 4191-9155
[email protected] www.cnauto.com.br
Effa MotorsAv. Antartica, 240
CEP: 01141-060, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 4196-1010
(canal direto frotista)[email protected]
www.effamotors.com.br
JAC MotorsAv Mofarrej, 1024, Vila Leopoldina
CEP: 05311-000, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 3839-6000www.jacmotorsbrasil.com.br
Kasinski Motos
R. Paes Leme, 524 - 16º Andar05424-904, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel (00 55) (11) 2948-8000 ou 0800 55 9044www.kasinski.com.br
Fiat Automóveis S.A.Av Do Contorno, 3455, Paulo Camilo
32669-900 - Betim, MG, BrazilTel. 0800 707 1000
www.fiat.com.br
Ford Motor Company Brasil Ltda.Avenida do Taboão, 899 - Rudge Ramos
09655-900 S. B. do Campo/SP, Brazil Tel. (00 55) (11) 4174-8855
www.ford.com.br
Ford CaminhõesAv. do Taboão, 899
09655-900, S. B. do Campo/SP, BrazilTel. 0800-703-3673
www.fordcaminhoes.com.br
Troller Veículos Especias S.AAv. Do Taboão, 899 - Prédio 6
09655-900, S. B. do Campo/SP, BrazilTel. 0800-703-3673
Fax (00 55) (11) 4174-4737www.troller.com.br
General Motors do Brasil Ltda.Avenida Goiás, 1.805
09550-900, S. C. do Sul/SP, BrazilTel. 11 4234-7700
www.chevrolet.com.br
Honda Automóveis do Brasil Ltda.Rua Dr. José Áureo Bustamante, 377
1º andar - Santo Amaro04710-090, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. 11 5576-5122www.honda.com.br
Hyundai - CAOA Montadora de Veículos S.A.Av. Ibirapuera, 2.822 - Moema
04028-002, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. 11 5538-1078 / 5538-1205
www.hyundai-motor.com.br
International Indústria Automotiva da América do Sul Ltda.
Av. Carlos Gomes, 466 - 10º andar - conj. 1.00290480-000, Porto Alegre/RS, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (51) 4009-5800 Fax (00 55) (51) 4009-5801
www.internationalcaminhoes.com.br
Iveco Latin America Ltda.Av. Senador Milton Campos, 175
Vila da Serra34000-000, Nova Lima/MG, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (31) 2123-4000www.iveco.com.br
Kia Motors do BrasilR. Francisco Ernesto Fávero, 662
13309-290, Itu/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 4024-8000
Tel. 0800-771-1011www.kia.com.br
Mahindra - Bramont Montadora Industrial e Comercial de Veículos S.A.
Av. dos Oitis, 6.360 – Distrito Industrial II 69085-842, Manaus/AM, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (92) 2123-8090Fax (00 55) (92) 2123-8099
www.bramont.com.br | www.mahindra.com.brShowroom: Av. Rebouças, 2.797
05401-350 - São Paulo - SPSAC 0800 707 8092
MAN Latin America Indústria e Comércio de Veículos Ltda.Rua Volkswagen, 291 - 7º, 8º e 9º andares
Jabaquara04344-901, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 5582-5122www.man-la.com
Mercedes-Benz do Brasil Ltda.Av. Alfred Jurzykowski, 562 - Vila Paulicéia
09680-900, S. B. do Campo/SP, Brazil Tel. (00 55) (11) 4173-6611
www.mercedes-benz.com.br
Mitsubishi - MMC Automotores do Brasil S.A.
Av. Nações Unidas, 19.84704795-100, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Telefone (00 55) 5694-2700Fax (00 55) 5694-2789
www.mitsubishimotors.com.br
Nissan do Brasil Automóveis Ltda.Avenida Renault, 1.300 - Borda do Campo83070-900 - São José dos Pinhais - PR
Tel. (00 55) (41) 3380-2000www.nissan.com.br
Peugeot Citroën do Brasil Automóveis Ltda.Praia de Botafogo, 501 - 7º and. conjs 703/704
Botafogo - Centro Empresarial Mourisco22250-040 - Rio de Janeiro - RJ
Tel. (00 55) (21) 3506-4900www.psa-peugeot-citroen.com.br
Renault do Brasil S.A.Avenida Renault, 1.300 - Borda do Campo83070-900, S. José dos Pinhais/PR, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (41) 3380-2000 www.renault.com.br
Scania Latin America Ltda.Avenida José Odorizzi, 151 - Vila Euro09810-902, S. B. do Campo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 4344-9333 Fax (00 55) (11) 4344-2659
www.scania.com.br
Toyota do Brasil Ltda.Av. Nações Unidas, 12.901
Torre Oeste - 15º andar - Brooklin04578-910, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) 5502-9100Fax (00 55) 5507-2285
www.toyota.com.br
Volkswagen do Brasil Indústria de Veículos Automotores Ltda.
Via Anchieta, Km 23,509823-901 - São Bernardo do Campo - SP
Tel. (00 55) 4347-2355www.volkswagen.com.br
Moto Honda da AmazôniaR. Dr. José Áureo Bustamante, 377
04710-090, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. 0800-0552221www.honda.com.br
Volvo do Brasil Veículos Ltda.Av. Juscelino Kubitschek de Oliveira, 2.600
CIC (Cidade Industrial de Curitiba) Caixa Postal 660
81260-900, Curitiba/PR, Brazil Tel. (00 55) (41) 3317-8111Fax (00 55) (41) 3317-8601
www.volvo.com.br
88 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Partners
Comm
itted
De
alers
The S
pecia
list
Pres
s
Nova Distribuidora de Veículos (GM)Av. João Dias, 2300
04724-003, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 5643-0800Fax (00 55) (11) 5643-0809
marcia.rodrigues@chevroletnova. com.brwww.chevroletnova.com.br
Grand Brasil Comércio de Veículos e Peças (Renault)
Av. Aricanduva, 5555. Arco 06.03527-000, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 2900-3000Fax (00 55) (11) 3847-7833
Sandrecar Comercial e Importadora S/A (Ford)
R. Alcides de Queiroz, 401.09015-550, Santo André/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) [email protected]
www.sandrecar.com.br
Autodata EditoraR.Verbo Divino, 750
Chácara Santo Antonio04719-001, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 5189-8900Fax (00 55) (11) 5189-8908
www.autodata.com.br
Auto ESP, Brazilorte - Editora GloboAv.Jaguaré, 1485
05346-902, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 3767-7728
www.autoeSP, Brazilorte.globo.com
Automotive News BrasilR.Bela Cintra, 299
01415.000, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel.(00 55) (11) 3217.2727
www.automotivenewsbrasil.com.br
Brasil EconômicoAv. das Nações Unidas, 11633
04578-901, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 3320.2000
www.brasileconomico.com.br
Brasilturis JornalR. General Jardim, 60. 4º andar01223-010, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 2198-2400Fax (00 55) (11) 3256-5818
Brasil Travel NewsR. Joaquim Floriano, 466, cj 1112.04534-002, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 2165-2344www.brasiltravelnews.com.br
Business Travel MagazineAv. Brig. Faria Lima, 1903, cj 85.01452-001, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 4111-4844www.businesstravel.com.br
Folha do TurismoR. Barão de Itapetininga, 151.
01042-001, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 3123-2222Fax (00 55) (11) 3129-9095
www.mercadoeeventos.com.br
Jornal do Carro / Jornal da TardeAv. Eng. Caetano Álvares, 55.
02598-900, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 3856-2122
www.jt.com.br
JornautoR.Oriente, 753
09551-010, São Caetano do Sul/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 4227-1016
Motor Press BrasilR. Bragança Paulista, 284.
04727-000, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 2165-8700
www.motorpressbrasil.com.br
Panrotas Editora Ltda.Av. Jabaquara, 1761
04045-901, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 2764-4800Fax (00 55) (11) 2276-1602
www.panrotas.com.br
Quatro RodasAv. das Nações Unidas,7221.
05425-902, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 3037-5869www.quatro-rodas.com.br
Rodas e MotoresR.806 , Quadra 8
74633-210, Goiânia/GO, BrazilTel. (62) 3945-3045
www.rodasemotores.com.br
TranSP, Brazilorte ModernoAv.Vereador José Diniz, 3300.
7º andar, cj 702 04604-006, São Paulo/SP, Brazil
Tel. (00 55) (11) 5096-8104www.revistatranSP, Brazilortemoderno.com.br
Truck & Van – Editora ScatR. Prof. Sebastião Soares de Faria, 57
01317-908, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) [email protected]
Valor EconômicoAv. Jaguaré, 1485
05346-000, São Paulo/SP, BrazilTel. (00 55) (11) 3767-1000
www.valor.com.br
w w w . c e s v i b r a s i l . c o m . b r
The technical management on claim handling and fleet decommission brings several advantages to your rental company.
• Adaptation of procedures, avoiding rework and waste• Procedure standardization• Agility and safety• Increase of productivity• Repair/maintenance cost reduction• Profit maximization
In a market increasingly more precise and competitive, operational efficiency is a differential that ensures achievements.
Check out how CINS can change radically your performance.
CINS – Integrate Claims Center55 11 3948 4811 | [email protected]
yesbrasil.net
Anuncio_CINS_ingles.indd 1 08/08/12 11:02
A
w w w . c e s v i b r a s i l . c o m . b r
The technical management on claim handling and fleet decommission brings several advantages to your rental company.
• Adaptation of procedures, avoiding rework and waste• Procedure standardization• Agility and safety• Increase of productivity• Repair/maintenance cost reduction• Profit maximization
In a market increasingly more precise and competitive, operational efficiency is a differential that ensures achievements.
Check out how CINS can change radically your performance.
CINS – Integrate Claims Center55 11 3948 4811 | [email protected]
yesbrasil.net
Anuncio_CINS_ingles.indd 1 08/08/12 11:02
90 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Partners
Bank
s
Insur
ance
Regis
tratio
n Inf
orma
tion
Infor
matio
n Te
chno
logy
Track
ers
Bloc
kers
Banco FiatAv Jabaquara, 2910
04046-500, São Paulo/SPTel. (00 55) (11) 5070-2614
www.bancofiat.com.br
Banco ToyotaAv. das Nações Unidas,12901, 17º andar
04578-000, São Paulo/SPTel. (00 55) (11) 5504-2000
Tel. 0800-0164155www.bancotoyota.com.br
BNDESAv. República do Chile, 100.
20031-917, Rio de janeiro/RJTel. (00 55) (21) 2172-7447
www.bndes.gov.br
Banco Volkswagen S/ARua Volkswagen, 291. 6º andar.
04344-920, São Paulo/SPTel. (00 55) (11) 5582-5559
www.bancovw.com.br/bancovw
Caixa Econômica FederalSetor Bancário Sul, Qd 04, Lote 3/4
70092-900, Brasília/DFTel. (00 55) (61) 3206-9000
www.caixa.gov.br
Serasa ExperianAlameda dos Quinimuras, 187
04068-900, São Paulo/SPTel. 0800-7737728
www.serasaexperian.com.br
David Nascimento Marcas e PatentesAv. Paulista, 1294,
01310-915, São Paulo/SPTel. (11) 3372-3766
Autenticis Consultoria de Sistemas e Marketing (COMVEN)
Av. Niemeyer, 02, Sl 206.22450-220, Rio de Janeiro/RJTel. (00 55) (21) 3206-5960
www.autenticis.com.br
Cadastro Nacional de Veículos Roubados (CNVR)
Rua Três Cruzes, 718 02285-000, São Paulo/SP
Tel. (00 55) (11) 2451.9500www.cnvr.com.br
Cesvi Brasil – Centro de Experimentação e Segurança Viária
Av Amador Aguiar, 700 - City Empr. Jaraguá 02998-020, São Paulo/SP
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3948-4800Fax (00 55) (11) 3948-4848
Consultoria AM3 Marketing IntegradaRua da Paz 93
06710-507, Cotia/SPTel. (00 55) (11) 3082 7010
Euroit Soluções em InformáticaTravessa da Lapa, 96, Cj 61.
80010-190, Curitiba/PRTel. (00 55) (41) 3074-9900
Fleet MaxRua Cerro Corá, 384 - Vila Madalena
05061-000, São Paulo/SPTel. (00 55) (11) 3025-6308 [email protected]
www.fleetmax.com.br
Projeta SistemasR. Jose Alexandre Buaiz, 160 - Sl 422,
29055-120 - Vitoria, ESTel. (00 55) (27) 2122-7622
SegplusAv. Presidente Wilson, 210. 14º andar
20030-020, Rio de Janeiro/RJTel. (00 55) (21) 3906-2765/2770
ST Corretora de SegurosRua Araújo Leite, 23-65
Vila Santa Tereza, 17012-055, Bauru/SPTEL: 0300 7887676
Car System Veiculos LtdaAv. Raja Gabaglia, 3350, São Bento
Belo Horizonte, MGTel/ Fax: (00 55) (31) 3441775
www.carsystem.com
Pósitron(PST Eletrônica Ltda.)
Estrada Telebrás Unicamp, km 97, s/n, cj 01
13086-510, Campinas/SPTel. (00 55) (19) 3787-6242/6477
www.pst.com.br
91 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Partners
Logis
tics
Serv
ices,
Logis
tics,
parts
and
acce
ssor
ies
airlin
es
Sada LogísticaR.Gustaf Dálen, 151
32530-510, Betim/MGTel. (31) 3071-9600Fax (31) 3071-9661www.sada.com.br
Transzero Transportadora de Veículos
R. dos Feltrins, 34709820-280, São Bernardo do Campo/SP
Tel. (11) 4397-7000www.transzero.com.br
Tegma Gestão LogísticaAv Nicola Dermachi, 200
09820-655, São Bernardo do Campo/SPTel. (11) 4343-2500Fax (11) 4347-9735
Continental Brasil Indústria Automotiva LtdaRua Endres, 1424
07043-000, Guarulhos/SPTel. (11) 2423-2979Fax (11) 2423-3579
luiz.rombola@continentalcorporation. comwww.continental-corporation.com
Fácil AssistRua Conselheiro Saraiva, 306 - Conj 81
Santana 02037-020 - São Paulo/SP Tel/ Fax: (11) 3132-1000www.superbid.net/home/
Flash Engenharia e Desenvolvimento Ltda.
Rua Eduardo Sandano, 85, Jardim das Estrelas, 18017-312 - Sorocaba/SPTel / Fax: (15) 3237-7300
www.flashengenharia.com.br
Girotondo Importadora e DistribuidoraRua Jose Jannarelli,442, Morumbi,
05615-000 - São Paulo/SPTEL: (11) 3478-4500
www.girotondo.com.br
Inbra Blindados Serviços de BlindagensAv. Papa João XXIII, 4947.
09370-800, Mauá/SPTel. (11) 2148-8600
www.grupoinbra.com.br
H-BusterR.Inácio Cervantes, 960.
05572-000, São Paulo/SPTel. (11) 2858-0001www.hbuster.com.br
Pirelli Pneus LTDAAv Capuava, 603, Portão 5, Santo André
09111-000 - São Paulo/SPwww.pirellipneus.com.br
SuperbidAl. Lorena, 800, 1º,2º e 3º andar
01424-001 - São Paulo/SPTel. (11) 2163-7804www.superbid.net
Azul Linhas AéreasAlameda Surubiju, 2010.06455-040, Barueri/SPTel. (11)0 4134-9886www.voeazul.com.br
Gol Linhas AéreasRua Gomes de Carvalho, 1692
12º andar 04547-006, São Paulo/SP
Tel. 0300-1152121www.voegol.com.br
TAM Linhas AéreasAv. Jurandir, 856, Lt 04.
04072-000, São Paulo/SPTel. (11) 5582-9273
www.tam.com.br
Trip Vias AéreasAv. Brasil, 1394.
13073-001, Campinas/SPTel. (19) 2139-3100Tel. 0300-7898747www.voetrip.com.br
Web Jet Linhas AéreasAv. Emb. Abelardo Bueno, 199, Salas 301 a 304
22775-040, Rio de Janeiro/RJTel. (21) 3572-2640www.webjet.com.br
Auto Life BlindagensAv. Duque De Caxias, 1500
13223-025 - Varzea Paulista/SPTel (11) 4606 1001
www.autolifeblindagens.com.br
Carglass Reparos e Trocas de vidrosAlameda Ásia, 164
Pólo Empresarial Tamboré,06543-312, Santana de Parnaíba/SP
Tel. (11) 4152-8100www.carglass.com.br
92 Yearbook ABLA 2012
Partners
Sindloc AlagoasR. Quintino Bocaiúva, 129.
57030-570, Maceió/ALTel. (00 55) (82) 3327-4512Fax (00 55) (82) [email protected]
Sindloc BahiaAv Tancredo Neves, 274. Centro
Empresarial Iguatemi, Bl A, Sl 618.41820-020, Salvador/BA
Tel. (00 55) (71) 3450-4218Fax (00 55) (71) [email protected]
www.sindlocba.com.br
Fede
ratio
nVe
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Renta
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indloc
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FENALOC – Federação Nacional das Empresas Locadoras de Veículos
AutomotoresSAUS QD 01, BL J, SALA 511,
Edifício CNT 70070-971, Brasília/DF
Tel. (00 55) (61) 3225-6728Fax (00 55) (61) 3226-2072
[email protected]@fenaloc.org
Sindloc BrasíliaSAI Quadra 15, conj 02, lote 23
71250-010, Brasília/DFTel./ Fax (00 55) (61) 3345 6749
Sindloc CearáR.Dr. Pedro Borges, 33. 3ºandar, Sl 311
60055-110, Fortaleza/CETel. (00 55) (85) 3253-3947Fax (00 55) (85) [email protected]
Sindloc Espírito SantoAv. N.S. da Penha,356.
Ed. Boulevard da Praia, 3º piso, Lj22.29055-131, Vitória/ES
Tel. (00 55) (27) 3315-5086Fax (00 55) (27) [email protected]
www.sindloces.com.br
Sindloc GoiásAv. Portugal, Quadra J9, Lote 24, nº 445
Setor Oeste74140-020, Goiânia/GO
Tel. (00 55) (62) 3945-0007Fax (00 55) (62) 3214-6744
Sindloc Minas GeraisR.Contendas,79
30430-480, Belo Horizonte/MGTel./Fax (00 55) (31) [email protected]
www.sindlocmg.com.br
Sindloc ParáAv.Conselheiro Furtado, 3906.
66073-160, Belém/PATel. (00 55) (91) [email protected]
Sindloc ParanáR. Silva Jardim, 2042. 16ºandar.
80250-200, Curitiba/PRTel. (00 55) (41) 3242-8260 | 3232-9408Fax (00 55) (41) 3242-6079 | 3223-6856
Sindloc PernambucoR.Capitão Zuzinha, 22.
Ed Setubal Center, Sl 305. 51030-420, Recife/PE
Tel./Fax (00 55) (81) [email protected]
Sindloc Rio de JaneiroAv. Guilherme Maxwell, 516, Sl 604.
21042-112, Rio de Janeiro/RJTel./Fax (00 55) (21) 2573-0558
Sindloc Rio Grande do NorteAv. Rodrigues Alves, 930,Sl 228, Espaço América.
59020-200, Natal/RNTEL/Fax (00 55) (84) 3201-4850
Sindloc Rio Grande do SulAv.São Pedro, 531. 2ºandar, Sl 208.
90230-120, Porto Alegre/RSTel. (00 55) (51) [email protected]
www.sindlocrs.com.br
Sindloc Santa CatarinaAv Eng. Max de Siuza, 844
88080-000, Florianópolis/SCTel./Fax (00 55) (48) 3244-5555
Sindloc São PauloPraça Ramos de Azevedo, 209,Cj22. 01037-010, São Paulo/SP
Tel. (00 55) (11) 3123-3131Fax (00 55) (11) 5082-1348
Sindlocs to be approvedMato Grosso
ParaíbaSergipe
For more information, go towww.abla.com.br
For more information, go towww.abla.com.br