Chattanooga Times Free Press

Profit slips at Volkswagen after accounting change

- BY DAVID MCHUGH

FRANKFURT, Germany — Profits have slipped at automaker Volkswagen in the first quarter because of a change in accounting rules, but sales increased and the company recorded no significan­t additional losses from its diesel emissions scandal.

Net profit fell 2 percent to 3.3 billion euros [$4 billion] on sales that rose 4 percent to 58.2 billion euros [$70.8 billion]. The company said Thursday that operating profits, which exclude financial items such as interest and taxes, fell to 4.2 billion euros from 4.4 billion euros — but would have shown an increase without the accounting changes, which affect how financial derivative­s are valued.

CEO Herbert Diess said the company is “in a robust position” with net cash of 24.3 billion euros in the automotive division. The company took “no significan­t

provision” related to the 2015 emissions scandal. Diess took over as CEO from Matthias Mueller on April 12.

The Porsche and Audi luxury car divisions were key money makers, contributi­ng 2.2 billion euros in operating earnings, or just over half the profit. Earnings at the mass-market Volkswagen division improved slightly to 879

million euros from 869 million euros.

The operating return on sales — a key indicator of profitabil­ity — fell, however, to 7.2 percent from 8.2 percent in the year-ago quarter.

Sales volume rose 7 percent to 2.68 million vehicles, leaving the company on an early pace to exceed last year’s record sales of 10.74 million vehicles worldwide.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Volkswagen cars are lifted inside a delivery tower of the company in Wolfsburg, Germany. The automaker released figures of the first quarter 2018 Thursday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Volkswagen cars are lifted inside a delivery tower of the company in Wolfsburg, Germany. The automaker released figures of the first quarter 2018 Thursday.

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