Daimler warns on full-year Mercedes-Benz earnings

Updated 21 September 2012
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Daimler warns on full-year Mercedes-Benz earnings

FRANKFURT: Daimler has warned that profit would slip at its flagship Mercedes-Benz Cars division this year due to a deteriorating market in Europe and China, spooking investors in German rivals including BMW and Volkswagen. “We are gearing up for a challenging environment,” chief executive Dieter Zetsche told reporters in Stuttgart.
Shares in both Daimler and BMW fell more than 3 percent amid fears a broader China contagion could infect other premium brands and expose them to factors such as falling prices and excessive inventory.
German automakers have so far remained immune to the sales slump hollowing out profits at many Western mass car manufacturers.
“Daimler’s warning today reaffirms its status as the most unlucky of the German OEMs (manufacturers). No other German automaker seems as prone to misfortune and misses,” wrote Bernstein analyst Max Warburton.
Mercedes suffers from far more significant problems in China than its competitors, which Zetsche has partly blamed on their local sales organization. China sales grew only 3 percent last month, whereas BMW sold 38 percent more cars and Audi 24 percent more.
Commerzbank analyst Daniel Schwarz said Daimler missed a golden opportunity in July to cut its profit target when most were expecting one.
“It would have been more clever had management used this freebie from the markets to guide toward a more cautious full-year forecast,” he said.
Credit Suisse, long a critic of Daimler’s management, raised questions about its executive team.
“In light of ongoing disappointments, we view investor concerns about management as the biggest factor holding back a better share price performance,” the bank said.
Zetsche said earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) at the luxury unit would fall short of last year’s 5.2 billion euros ($ 6.79 billion) rather than match it.
Second-half EBIT at the Mercedes-Benz Cars unit will fall below the first-half result, when it earned 2.57 billion euros, the chief executive added. This implies a shortfall of at least 60 million euros for the full year.
Zetsche, who reaffirmed full-year forecasts for the entire group, said the business environment in the European market was becoming increasingly difficult.
The carmaker would use a package of measures to counter the slump, he added, amid a significant increase in competitive pressures in China, a major source of profits for German luxury brands in recent years thanks to surging sales of high-priced cars like the Mercedes-Benz flagship S-Class saloon.
The Stuttgart-based company said in July it expected group EBIT from its ongoing business this year to be around the same amount as the 9 billion euros it earned in 2011.


Saudi Arabia opens 3rd round of Exploration Empowerment Program

Updated 01 February 2026
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Saudi Arabia opens 3rd round of Exploration Empowerment Program

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources, in collaboration with the Ministry of Investment, has opened applications for the third round of the Exploration Empowerment Program, part of ongoing efforts to accelerate mineral exploration in the Kingdom, reduce early-stage investment risks, and attract high-quality investment from local and international mining companies.

The third round of the Exploration Empowerment Program offers a comprehensive support package targeting exploration companies and mineral prospecting license holders.

The initiative aims to lower investment risks for projects and support a faster transition from prospecting to development.

"The program provides coverage of up to 70 percent of the total salaries of Saudi technical staff, such as geologists, during the first two years, increasing to 100 percent thereafter, in line with program requirements.

This support aims to develop talent, build national capabilities in mineral exploration, promote job localization, and facilitate the transfer of geological knowledge.

The application for the third round opened on Jan. 14, allowing participants to benefit from the Kingdom’s attractive investment environment, its stable legal framework, and streamlined regulatory structures, as well as integrated infrastructure that supports the transition from mineral resources to operational mines.

The ministry has set the timeline for the third round, with the application period running from Jan. 14 to March 31.

This will be followed by the evaluation, approval, and signing of agreements from April 1 to May 31, with the eligible projects set to be announced between June 1 and July 31 of the same year.

The program stages include submitting exploration data during the reimbursement and payment phase from Sept. 1 to Nov. 30, followed by technical and financial verification of work programs and approval of the disbursement of support funds in January 2027.

The exploration data will then be published on the National Geological Database in April 2027.

The ministry emphasized that the EEP focuses on supporting the exploration of strategically important minerals with national priority. It also contributes to enhancing geological knowledge by providing up-to-date data that meets international standards, helping investors make informed decisions and supporting the growth of national companies and local supply chains.

The ministry urged companies to apply early to benefit from the program’s third round, which coincided with the fifth edition of the International Mining Conference, which was held from Jan. 13 to 15.