Fall in Volkswagen brand
profit shows lasting effects of scandal
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[July 28, 2016]
By Andreas Cremer
BERLIN (Reuters) - Volkswagen reported a 12
percent drop in quarterly profit at its main passenger car division on
Thursday, a big improvement on the quarter before but showing the
challenges it still faces to overcome its emissions scandal.
Europe's largest automaker is struggling to rebuild its reputation and
meet billions of dollars of costs after admitting in September to
installing illegal software to mask toxic emissions on about 11 million
diesel vehicles worldwide.
The German company published headline first-half numbers last week,
saying underlying operating profit of 7.5 billion euros ($8.3 billion)
beat analysts' expectations largely due to improvements at its
mass-market VW brand.
The brand, Volkswagen's largest by revenues, saw profits plunge 86
percent in the first quarter.
However, some analysts said the drop in the division's second-quarter
earnings showed there was still much work to do.
"Some of the details are mediocre, especially the VW brand result," said
Commerzbank analyst Sascha Gommel of the company's full first-half
earnings release.
"The numbers are slightly disappointing, the brand's earnings quality is
still not good," he added, noting higher plant utilization at the brand
in the second quarter had not translated into improved profits.
Commerzbank has a "hold" rating on Volkswagen shares, which were down 2
percent at 1020 GMT.
LAGGING MARGINS
The company said operating profit at the VW brand fell to 808 million
euros in April-June, down from 914 million a year earlier, as expenses
related to the emissions scandal and lower sales outweighed cost
cutting.
That gave the brand a quarterly profit margin of 2.9 percent, up from
0.3 percent in the first quarter, but down from 3.3 percent in the same
period last year and still well short of the levels achieved by rivals
such as Toyota <7203.T>, PSA Peugeot Citroen <PEUP.PA> and Renault <RENA.PA>.
In a bid to catch up, Volkswagen is speeding up model development,
slashing costs and ceding more power to regional operations to target
markets more effectively.
The company said exchange rate moves and higher sales of cheaper cars
compared with the same period last year were also factors behind the
fall in VW brand earnings.
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A staff member stands next to a Volkswagen car during 16th Shanghai
International Automobile Industry Exhibition in Shanghai, April 20,
2015. REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo
At 1.5 billion euros, the brand also bore the brunt of 2.2 billion euros of
additional provisions made in January-June to cover the costs of the emissions
scandal, VW said.
Analysts have said lasting progress in raising the VW brand's profitability will
depend on ongoing talks between management and labor over strategy and the
future of Germany's high-cost factories.
VW's powerful unions are seeking fixed targets for production and investment in
the talks with brand chief Herbert Diess, a former BMW <BMWG.DE> executive hired
a year ago to turn around the business.
"Mass-market carmakers are all very profitable at the moment," said Evercore ISI
analyst Arndt Ellinghorst who recommends buying VW stock. "The VW brand margin
has to improve considerably."
Volkswagen has pledged greater investment in electric cars and on-demand
transport services as it reshapes its business.
The group stuck to its 2016 guidance, predicting revenues would fall by as much
as 5 percent amid weak demand in South America and Russia as well as volatile
exchange rates.
It forecast a group operating margin of 5 to 6 percent, versus 6 percent in
2015, adjusted for special items.
(Editing by Maria Sheahan and Mark Potter)
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