Cape Breton Post

Imperial Oil going ahead with Aspen oilsands project

- BY DAVID MCHUGH

Germany luxury automaker BMW said Wednesday that its net profit fell 24 per cent in the third quarter as the company spent more on new technology and faced market disruption­s due to other companies failing to get vehicles certified in time for new European Union emissions tests.

Net profit fell to 1.40 billion euros ($1.6 billion) from 1.84 billion euros in the year-ago quarter. The figure was short of the 1.61 billion euros foreseen by analysts surveyed by financial informatio­n provider FactSet. Revenues rose 4.7 per cent to 24.74 billion euros.

The Munich-based automaker said it was increasing its investment in the new technologi­es such as autonomous and electric cars that are expected to transform the industry in coming years. Research and developmen­t expenses in the first nine months of the year rose by 400 million euros to 3.8 billion, and are due to total 7 per cent of sales for the year.

BMW managed to get its cars certified under tougher new emissions tests but Daimler and Volkswagen both had to sell off uncertifie­d vehicles ahead of the Sept. 1 deadline, leading to pressure on prices.

The company also faced headwinds from warranty actions and trade tensions. It had 679 million euros in charges for recalls and service actions, dominated by the recall of 1.6 million vehicles in Europe and Asia to fix an emissions control component that can cause the vehicle to catch fire.

New Chinese import taxes on cars, imposed in retaliatio­n to new U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods, also hit BMW because it makes cars in the U.S. and exports them to China. The company’s single largest plant is in Spartanbur­g, South Carolina. BMW said the tariff conflict had undermined consumer confidence.

The profit margin on sales, a key earnings metric, fell sharply to 4.4 per cent from 8.6 per cent for the automotive business.

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