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VW Bucks the Trend in Crowd of Struggling Carmakers

VW Bucks the Trend in Crowd of Struggling Carmakers

(Bloomberg) -- Volkswagen AG joined PSA Group in using sales of lucrative sport utility vehicles to stand out against a crowd of carmakers struggling with the auto market’s downturn.

The same day Nissan Motor Co. said it would cut about 10% of its global workforce after quarterly profits fell to almost zero, VW on Thursday beat profit expectations in an increasingly difficult environment.

Models like the VW T-Roc crossover and Skoda Karoq account for some 35% of deliveries this year compared with just 25% last year, a turnaround after VW lagged rivals’ SUV lineups for years. Sales of higher-priced SUVs helped boost Peugeot-maker PSA’s first-half return on sales to a record. VW’s shares rose as much 2.2%.

“Our model mix is improving and we’ve been successful with our pricing,” Chief Financial Officer Frank Witter told Bloomberg TV in an interview. The second half of the year will be “potentially difficult” in a “weaker market environment,” he said.

To counter declining demand, VW has scaled down production plans by some 450,000 cars for this year and will lower output further if necessary, Witter said. VW’s cut roughly equals the annual output of one its 122 factories worldwide and exceeds Tesla Inc.’s entire targeted 2019 deliveries of between 360,000 and 400,000 cars.

Carmakers have struggled in the past months with falling demand, trade tensions and record spending for electric and self-driving cars that’s squeezing returns, leading companies like Daimler, Tesla Inc. and Ford Motor Co. to cut annual guidance or fall short of expectations.

China, the world’s biggest car market, contracted 12% through June, amid declines in the U.S. and Europe and forecasts for a tough second half of the year. Nissan on Thursday said it’ll cut 12,500 jobs, reduce global production capacity by 10% by the end of fiscal 2022 and slim down its product lineup.

“VW may see fresh records on sales, revenue and operating results this year,” NordLB analyst Frank Schwope said in a note. “However, worsening trade conflicts and ongoing high investments in future technology for electric and self-driving cars will make for a volatile environment.”

While Volkswagen’s second-quarter profit excluding special items declined 8.1% to 5.13 billion euros ($5.7 billion), it still beat analyst expectations of 4.9 billion euros. The company kept its margin guidance unchanged for an operating return on sales in a range of 6.5% and 7.5%.

Volkswagen was flat at 158.64 euros at 11:33 a.m. in Frankfurt trading. The shares have gained 14% this year.

Deliveries at the Audi luxury brand should pick up in the second half of the year, helped by an updated version of the popular A4 sedan, Witter said. Audi, VW’s biggest profit contributor, is currently is talks with labor unions over future production plans including on where to manufacture electric cars.

VW remains on track to generate at least 9 billion euros in cash this year after first-half results offer “a stable basis,” Witter said.

Free cash flow of 6.9 billion euros in the first half of the year is “almost double of what Daimler and BMW together will generate in all of 2019,” Evercore ISI analyst Arndt Ellinghorst said in a note. “The market seems to happily ignore this given VW trades at a 20% discount to BMW and Daimler.”

Asset Sales

VW last month listed its trucks business Traton SE , a significant move toward its goal of greater focus on the main car business. Investors expect an update on the next steps to streamline VW’s conglomerate structure, which might include selling industrial machinery units Renk AG and MAN Energy Solutions.

VW’s management is “pushing hard” to lift the manufacturer’s low valuation, Witter said, with the company exploring strategic options for Renk AG and MAN Energy Solutions. Analysts have urged VW to consider deeper changes including an initial public offering of the high-margin Porsche sportscar business to unlock value.

A Porsche IPO “isn’t a priority” and there are currently no plans to sell the Ducati motorbike brand, Witter said, reiterating previous comments. But he left the door open to explore options at some point “down the road.”

--With assistance from Matthew Miller.

To contact the reporter on this story: Christoph Rauwald in Frankfurt at crauwald@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Elisabeth Behrmann at ebehrmann1@bloomberg.net, Chad Thomas

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.