Fiat Chrysler cuts debt by more than expected
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[April 26, 2018]
MILAN (Reuters) - Fiat
Chrysler Automobiles (FCA) <FCHA.MI> reduced its debts by more than
expected in the first quarter, putting the carmaker well on course to
become cash positive later this year.
Chief Executive Sergio Marchionne expects to cancel all debt during 2018
- possibly by the end of June - and generate around 4 billion euros ($5
billion) in net cash by the end of the year.
Marchionne has said that forecast does not include any one-off measures,
nor the impact of the planned spin-off of parts maker Magneti Marelli,
which he hopes to execute by early 2019.
The world's seventh-largest carmaker said on Thursday net debt had
fallen to 1.3 billion euros ($1.6 billion) by the end of March, well
below a consensus forecast of 2.6 billion euros in a Thomson Reuters
poll of analysts.
FCA said capital spending fell 900 million euros in the quarter due to "programme
timing", which analysts said implied higher investments for the rest of
the year.
The Italian-American group <FCAU.N> said first-quarter operating profit
rose 5 percent to 1.61 billion euros, below a consensus forecast of 1.74
billion, as a weaker performance from its North American profit center
weighed.
Shipments there were higher due to the new Jeep Wrangler and Compass
models. But currency moves hit revenues and earnings, and costs related
to new product launches added to the pressure.
FCA's shift to sell more trucks and SUVs boosted margins yet again in
North America to 7.4 percent from 7.3 percent in the same quarter a year
ago, although they were down from the 8 percent recorded in the
preceding three months.
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Sergio Marchionne, CEO, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, speaks with
journalists at the North American International Auto Show in
Detroit, Michigan, U.S., January 15, 2018. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook/File
Photo
Marchionne, preparing to hand over to an internal successor next year, is close
to his goal of ending a margin gap with larger U.S. rivals General Motors <GM.N>
and Ford <F.N>.
The 65-year-old has said becoming debt free and being able to compete on a par
with U.S. peers would mean FCA no longer needed a partner to survive and could
well succeed on its own.
The CEO has previously said tying up with another carmaker would help to meet
the huge costs in an industry investing in electric vehicles and automated
driving.
FCA shares fell immediately after the results, but recovered to trade up 3
percent at 19.71 euros by 1150 GMT, outperforming a 0.4 percent rise in Europe's
blue-chip stock index <.FTEU3>.
($1 = 0.8214 euros)
(Reporting by Agnieszka Flak; Editing by Mark Potter)
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