The Jerusalem Post

Fiat Chrysler plunges to loss, no change to PSA deal

- • By GIULIO PIOVACCARI

MILAN (Reuters) - Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s (FCA) plunged to a first-quarter loss of $1.8 billion and scrapped its full-year earnings forecast on Tuesday, as the automaker grapples with a coronaviru­s crisis that has hammered production and sales.

The Italian-American company, which has struck a binding merger deal with France’s PSA Group to create the world’s fourth largest carmaker, said it remained committed to the tie-up, despite “unexpected and unpreceden­ted times.”

On a conference call, FCA Chief Executive Michael Manley said “the terms of the deal have not changed” and that it remained “committed to completing the transactio­n by the end of this year or early 2021.”

Car sales have slumped worldwide as measures to contain the coronaviru­s pandemic forced production lines to shut and showrooms to close, leaving manufactur­ers scrambling to try to conserve cash.

Manley said a planned 1.1 billion euro dividend was under review, as part of FCA’s efforts.

The company has begun reopening plants in China and Europe, and said most of its North American ones were expected to reopen on May 18.

Much of FCA’s revenue and profit come from North America, where quarterly sales of its Ram truck brand were up 7% from the previous year and its share of the full-size pickup market rose to 24%.

Capital expenditur­e (capex) was up in the quarter, driven by spending on the new Jeep Wagoneer and Grand Wagoneer, and redesigned

Jeep Grand Cherokee models. But executives said full-year capex estimates would be trimmed by 1 billion euros as key program launches had been delayed by an average three months.

FCA said it made a net loss from continuing operations of 1.69 billion euros ($1.83 billion) in the quarter. That compared with a 508 million euro net profit

“The pandemic has had, and continues to have, a significan­t impact on our operations,” the company said in a statement.

However, FCA still made an operating profit, albeit 95% lower than a year earlier. Adjusted earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) amounted to 52 million euros.

FCA’s Milan-listed shares extended their gains after the results were released and were up 2.5% at 1245 GMT.

The automaker said that due to the continued uncertaint­y related to the pandemic, it had withdrawn its full-year guidance and would update it when it had better visibility of the overall impact of the crisis.

In February, the group guided for an increase in adjusted EBIT to more than 7 billion euros this year and industrial free cash flow of over 2 billion euros.

In the first quarter, industrial free cash flow was around minus 5 billion euros. But FCA said it had available liquidity of 18.6 billion euros as of March 31, including a 6.25 billion revolving credit facility which was fully drawn down in April.

Liquidity was further strengthen­ed last month with a new 3.5 billion euro incrementa­l bridge credit facility, which remains fully undrawn.

“We continue to assess all funding options,” FCA said.

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