Daimler upbeat on profit as luxury cars offset spending
Daimler struck an upbeat tone, calling for “slightly” higher 2018 earnings, as sales growth of its higher-priced Mercedes-Benz luxury cars like the S-Class coupe helps offset record spending to develop electric vehicles.
The forecast shows the strategy of pushing powerful and lucrative gas-guzzlers to finance the electric car revolution is paying off. The return-on-sales in the Mercedes unit rose slightly to 9 percent, even as spending on new technology jumped 9.5 percent during the first quarter.
Two months ago, Daimler guided for flat profit this year, though a recent accounting adjustment lowered the yearago comparable.
“We are sustainably continuing along our profitable growth course,” Chief Executive Officer Dieter Zetsche of the Stuttgart, Germany-based company said Friday in a statement. “We aim to continue building on this and will systematically implement our strategy” to boost sales while adapting to industrywide technology shifts.
Mercedes, the world’s best-selling luxury-car brand, posted its best quarterly sales ever, with deliveries of the GLC crossover increasing 33 percent and the revised flagship S-Class posting a 29 percent gain.
Zetsche predicted in February that investment costs and currency shifts would hold back profit by as much as 2 billion euros ($2.4 billion) this year.
Daimler is developing a line of 10 fully battery-powered models under the EQ sub-brand to go on sale within five years, as well as hybrid variants of Mercedes’ existing vehicle range. Spending on new technology and models during the first three months of the year rose to 2.3 billion euros.
The company is also initiating a corporate overhaul, a task potentially complicated by Chinese automotive billionaire Li Shufu’s purchase of a 9.7 percent stake early this year to become Daimler’s largest shareholder.
Offsetting some of the positive momentum is a consumer backlash among diesel buyers in Europe.
The technology’s struggles since Volkswagen AG’s cheating on diesel emissions in 2015 have intensified as German buyers worry about potential driving bans in cities.
The resulting drop in expected used-car prices prompted Daimler to take a charge of 100 million euros on the value of its lease book, Chief Financial Officer Bodo Uebber said on a conference call with reporters.