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VW warns over 2018 earnings as Germany mulls diesel ban

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Volkswagen said profitabil­ity could take a hit this year as the car maker invests billions of euros into electric vehicles and launches a raft of new models.

Europe’s largest automotive group, which reported record 2017 earnings on Friday, said it expected a return on sales for 2018 of between 6.5 and 7.5 per cent before special items, after reaching 7.4 per cent last year.

It expects revenue to exceed the 2017 record of €231 billion (Dh1.04 trillion) by as much as 5 per cent.

Volkswagen is investing billions of euros into electric and self-driving cars while still paying out for the “Dieselgate” emissions scandal which has cost the company around $30bn in charges and fines.

The German group set aside another €600 million in the fourth quarter in provisions for higher legal risks and vehicle buy-backs related to the emissions scandal, raising 2017 provisions to €3.2bn.

In total, VW has now put aside €25.8bn to cover fines, compensati­on and vehicle refits, of which nearly €20bn have so far been paid out.

The German government, which has steadfastl­y opposed bans on heavily-polluting diesel cars in cities, now plans legal changes that would allow driving bans on certain routes on an emergency basis, the

Rheinische Post newspaper reported on Saturday.

Transporta­tion State Secretary Norbert Barthle, a conservati­ve, disclosed the change of approach in a reply to a parliament­ary query by the pro-environmen­t Greens party, the newspaper said.

News of the shift comes days before a German court rules on whether cities can implement driving bans that could lower the resale value of up to 15 million vehicles in Europe’s largest car market, forcing car makers to pay for modificati­ons.

Germany’s federal government is under pressure to help 70 cities whose emissions violate EU standards.

“A new legal basis is to be establishe­d in the road traffic act that would allow ... driving bans or restrictio­ns on certain limited routes to protect human health against particulat­es or emissions [nitrogen oxide],” Mr Barthle said.

“That would make possible for the first time route-limited, emergency measures to protect against particulat­es.”

Mr Barthle said the changes would make it possible for cities to implement driving bans outside of air pollution plans.

He said the changes could be incorporat­ed in revisions now being prepared to provide parking privileges to vehicles operated by car-sharing services, and the entire package of measures could be finalised by the end of the year.

Chancellor Angela Merkel said this month she wanted to avoid driving bans by focusing on switching fleets of taxis and buses to electric propulsion, as well as other measures.

But she also underscore­d the need to find solutions quickly for the affected cities. Greens policymake­r Matthias Gastel said the federal government now appeared to view limited driving bans as unavoidabl­e, but was still leaving the issue up to cities and communitie­s.

“It’s good to clear up the legal situation, but there’s a danger of a patchwork of widely differing regulation­s,” he said.

Germany’s highest federal administra­tive court is due to rule today on an appeal brought by German states against bans imposed by local courts in Stuttgart and Duesseldor­f over poor air quality.

That may further impact VW. The Wolfsburg firm is known for taking a conservati­ve stance when it comes to its outlook for profitabil­ity, but analysts were still disappoint­ed.

“There is room for them to go higher,” said Bankhaus Metzler analyst Juergen Pieper, who has a “buy” recommenda­tion on VW shares. “The market probably needs to scale back its expectatio­ns a bit.”

VW shares fell after the results and closed 0.8 per cent lower at €162.60.

VW had been a laggard on electrific­ation until it admitted in 2015 to cheating on US diesel emissions

The ‘Dieselgate’ emissions scandal has cost the company around $30bn in charges and fines

tests and had to deal with new Chinese quotas for EVs and tightening regulation in Europe. This prompted a strategic shift to zero-emission and self-driving technology, and VW has one of the most ambitious programmes in the industry.

“We must not relax our efforts because huge challenges lie ahead,” finance chief Frank Witter said.

“Shaping the group’s transforma­tion will not only require a great deal of time and energy, it will also be very expensive.”

Group operating profit after special items nearly doubled to a record €13.8bn from €7.1bn a year ago, VW said, helped by record sales of luxury Audis and Porsches but below the bottom-end forecast of €13.9bn in a Reuters poll.

VW said earnings were driven by a growing share of sales of higher-margin models such as the redesigned Tiguan 4x4 and the Arteon fastback and increasing savings from VW’s modular platforms.

The car maker forecast 2018 group sales to exceed moderately last year’s record of 10.7 million vehicles. Group sales jumped 10 per cent in January with demand up in all major world regions, showing that the emissions scandal has not dented VW’s popularity among consumers.

The company faced a new diesel scandal last month when it emerged that VW and other German car makers had sponsored diesel fume tests involving monkeys and humans.

 ?? AFP ?? The emissions scandal has not dented VW’s popularity
AFP The emissions scandal has not dented VW’s popularity

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