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Continental Sees Chips, Inflation Dragging on Auto Industry

Continental Sees Chips, Inflation Dragging on Auto Industry

Continental AG, Europe’s second-biggest supplier of car parts, warned the global bottleneck in chip supply and raw material cost inflation will drag on the auto industry through the rest of the year.

The maker of tires, brake systems and electronic components reported better-than-expected adjusted earnings before interest and taxes for the second quarter and raised the low end of forecasts for annual revenue and margins. But it also trimmed its yearly projection for industrywide production growth to 8% to 10%, from 9% to 12%.

“The chip supply shortage and rising raw material prices will weigh on the automotive industry for all of 2021,” Chief Executive Officer Nikolai Setzer said in a statement Thursday. Continental shares slumped as much as 4.4% in Frankfurt trading.

Continental Sees Chips, Inflation Dragging on Auto Industry

The supply woes idling car plants have led most manufacturers to set conservative expectations for the year even after a strong first half. BMW AG this week kept its profit forecast unchanged and Volkswagen AG warned the constraints will get worse during the second half of the year. Chip challenges and continued fallout from the pandemic have hit Continental at a time of declining returns that prompted the manufacturer to announce plans last year to cut or transfer some 30,000 jobs.

The company now sees at least 33.5 billion euros ($39.7 billion) of revenue this year, up from 32.5 billion euros, and at least a 6.5% adjusted Ebit margin, up from 6%.

For the rubber unit -- with products spanning tires, hoses and industrial conveyors -- Continental raised its estimate for the drag higher raw material prices will have on the business to 500 million euros, from 350 million. The company still upped its forecasts for revenue and returns at the division as it passed on higher input costs.

Continental Sees Chips, Inflation Dragging on Auto Industry

Hanover-based Continental abruptly replaced former CEO Elmar Degenhart last year after falling returns and slow progress making structural changes in the shift to electric vehicles. Powertrain unit Vitesco Technologies will be spun off in September after several delays, long after similar moves by rivals.

The separation will form a standalone company spanning EV and combustion-powertrain components as well as sensors. Vitesco may pursue acquisitions of smaller companies to grow faster in some regions, as well as potentially a larger transaction to gain an edge in a rapidly reshaping industry, Vitesco CEO Andreas Wolf said last month.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.