Daimler lifts 2020 profit outlook as Mercedes-Benz margins rebound

In this Thursday, April 30, 2020 file photo, an employee attaches a Mercedes emblem as he works on a Mercedes-Benz S-class car at the Mercedes plant in Sindelfingen, Germany. (AP)
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  • Daimler said its outlook is based on the premise that conditions will continue to normalize and that no further setbacks occur as a result of the pandemic

FRANKFURT: German automaker Daimler raised its 2020 profit outlook on Friday as a 24 percent jump in demand for luxury cars in China in the third quarter, a new record, helped turn around margins at its Mercedes-Benz cars division.

Benefiting from improved pricing and a fall in fixed costs, adjusted return on sales at its Mercedes-Benz Cars & Vans division rose to 9.4 percent, up from 7 percent a year earlier and rebounding from minus 1.5 percent in the second quarter.
The car and truck maker said it now expected full-year earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) to reach prior-year levels, compared with its previous expectation of a drop in earnings.
Daimler said it sold 45,000 hybrid and electric cars in the third quarter and expects sales to rise in the fourth quarter.

HIGHLIGHTS

• Expects full-year EBIT to reach 2019 levels

• Deliveries of luxury cars may fall in 2020

• China boosts Mercedes-Benz margins

These cars delivered a positive contribution to margin and would allow the carmaker to meet European Union emissions goals.
“We appreciate the fact the Mercedes can deliver very high margins whilst selling an increasing number of electrified vehicles (EVs). This should calm down some of the fears concerning alleged material profitability erosion from EVs,” Arndt Ellinghorst, analyst at Bernstein Research, said on Friday.
The company’s adjusted EBIT rose to €3.48 billion ($4.11 billion) in the quarter, up from €3.14 billion a year earlier.
However, quarterly deliveries of Mercedes Benz Cars and Vans were down 4 percent as the COVID-19 pandemic continued to weigh on demand, prompting Daimler to reiterate that it expects group unit sales and revenue in 2020 to be significantly lower than the previous year.
Daimler said its outlook is based on the premise that conditions will continue to normalize and that no further setbacks occur as a result of the pandemic.