National Post (National Edition)

Chrysler trims Fiat Q1 profit: Marchionne

Sales decline ahead of new Jeep model

- By Bernie Woodall

DETROIT • Carmaker Fiat SpA’s first-quarter profit slumped more than expected as its U.S. unit Chrysler Group LLC’s sales suffered from the phase-out of the Jeep Liberty pending a new model launch.

“We knew we would be limping in the quarter. I just didn’t think I was going to limp that much,” said Sergio Marchionne, chief executive of both Chrysler and its parent Fiat, on a conference call with analysts and reporters.

Mr. Marchionne in January warned that Chrysler’s firstquart­er earnings would be down from a year earlier because of the expense of product launches and the fact that the Jeep Liberty SUV was no longer being produced.

The Liberty’s successor, the Jeep Cherokee, was not sold in the first quarter and will not be sold until the third quarter.

But Mr. Marchionne said that there were delays in the production launches of the Jeep Grand Cherokee and RAM heavy-duty trucks, which he said are among the highest profit-makers for the automaker.

Fiat, which took control of the third-largest U.S. automaker when Chrysler emerged from a government-sponsored bankruptcy four years ago, stood by its financial forecasts for 2013 despite a worsening European car market and lower revenue in the U.S. for the first quarter.

Fiat said it sees full-year revenue in the €88-billion to €92-billion ($116.55-billion to $121.88-billion) range, trading profit between €4-billion and €4.5-billion, and net industrial debt of about €7-billion.

Analysts had expected a weak quarter for the combined group, which reports consolidat­ed earnings, and the results came in below consensus.

Tr a d i n g profit was €618-million, below the €720-million forecast by 21 analysts published on Fiat’s website. Pre-tax profit came in at €160-million, compared to a forecast of €300-million by analysts.

Net debt was €7.1-billion, in line with forecasts, and higher than the €6.5-billion at the end of 2012.

Citi Research analyst Harald Hendrikse said the quarter’s results again highlight Fiat’s difficult debt issue.

“With debt at current levels, the company cannot compete in this industry longer term against giants like Volkswagen AG spending €16-billion on capital expenditur­es and research and developmen­t,” said a Citi Research report issued on Monday.

European losses narrowed, however, despite a 10% market drop.

Fiat’s loss in Europe before interest and tax narrowed to €111-million from a loss of €170-million the quarter before. Fiat’s mass market car sales in Europe fell by 8%, bolstered by the launch of the new Fiat 500L small car, the company said.

At Chrysler, first-quarter net income fell 65% to US$166-million from US$473million a year earlier. Net revenue slipped 6% to US$15.4billion.

On the conference call, Mr. Marchionne introduced Richard Palmer, Chrysler’s chief financial officer, by saying Mr. Palmer would give the “not so glorious details of a not so glorious quarter.”

Chrysler said it will increase vehicle shipments in the second quarter by at least 13% from the first quarter, to 650,000 vehicles, up from 574,000 in the first quarter.

Of the vehicles the company shipped in the first quarter, 73% went to the U.S. market, up from 69% a year earlier.

Mr. Marchionne said the Jeep Grand Cherokee, now that its launch delays are over, will show strong April sales, and that the biggest boost in Grand Cherokee sales will show in the third quarter.

He said in the coming quarters Chrysler will better match up production and retail sales performanc­e.

“Close your eyes, plug your nose and move it on from here,” Mr. Marchionne said. The suspension of sales of the Jeep Liberty, in anticipati­on of a new model, crimped Chrysler sales in the first quarter.

 ?? ALESSIA PIERDOMENI­CO / BLOOMBERG NEWS FILES ?? Sergio Marchionne, chief executive of Fiat, says he knew the automaker would be
“limping” into the company’s first quarter — just not as badly as has occurred.
ALESSIA PIERDOMENI­CO / BLOOMBERG NEWS FILES Sergio Marchionne, chief executive of Fiat, says he knew the automaker would be “limping” into the company’s first quarter — just not as badly as has occurred.
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