Volkswagen profit jumps, but ‘great challenges’ ahead

The Volkswagen group confirmed its full-year outlook, expecting revenues ‘up to five percent higher’ compared with the previous year. (AFP)
Updated 01 August 2018
Follow

Volkswagen profit jumps, but ‘great challenges’ ahead

  • Despite the good news, Volkswagen’s new chief executive Herbert Diess sounded a note of caution
  • Like other German automakers, Volkswagen is also nervously eyeing US-EU trade tensions

FRANKFURT: Volkswagen on Wednesday reported a leap in second quarter profit thanks to strong sales, but the German car giant warned that strict new emissions tests and global trade tensions posed “great challenges” in the months ahead.
The Wolfsburg-based group said net profit jumped 6.8 percent year-on-year to 3.3 billion euros ($3.8 billion) between April and June, beating analyst expectations.
The positive result comes even after VW had to shell out another 1.6 billion euros “in connection with the diesel crisis,” as the fallout from its 2015 emissions cheating scandal rumbles on.
Revenues were up 3.4 percent to 61 billion euros after the VW group — whose 12 brands include luxury Porsche and Audi as well as the more affordable Skoda — delivered a record 2.8 million vehicles in the second quarter.
Despite the good news, VW’s new chief executive Herbert Diess sounded a note of caution.
“We cannot rest on our laurels because great challenges lie ahead of us in the coming quarters — especially regarding the transition to the new WLTP test procedure,” Diess said in a statement.
“Growing protectionism also poses major challenges for the globally integrated automotive industry.”
Volkswagen is set to close its iconic Wolfsburg plant for several days in the third quarter as the group scrambles to adapt to tough new EU emissions test from September 1, known as WLTP.
The tests are meant to better mimic real-world driving conditions than lab tests, to prevent the kind of rigging exposed in VW’s “dieselgate” controversy.
Like other German automakers, Volkswagen is also nervously eyeing US-EU trade tensions, particularly President Donald Trump’s threat to slap duties of up to 25 percent on car imports.
Despite the clouds on the horizon, the VW group confirmed its full-year outlook, expecting revenues “up to five percent higher” compared with the previous year.
It is targeting an operating profit margin before special items of between 6.5 and 7.5 percent, compared with 7.4 percent last year.
Shares in VW fell 1.4 percent to 150.10 euros in early afternoon trading in Frankfurt, against a blue-chip Dax index narrowly in the red.
Volkswagen was plunged into its biggest-ever crisis in 2015 after it admitted to installing “defeat devices” in 11 million diesel cars worldwide designed to cheat pollution tests.
The scandal has cost it over €27 billion so far in compensation, buy-backs and fines and the company remains entangled in legal woes at home and abroad.
CEO Diess took the helm in April, vowing to steer the company out of the diesel cloud and accelerate a shift toward electric and self-driving vehicles.
But in a fresh blow in June, German prosecutors arrested Audi boss Rupert Stadler as part of their probe into the diesel scam.
“We hope that the prosecutor’s office can quickly clarify the matter,” Diess told reporters in a conference call.
Last month, the European Commission said VW had repaired about 80 percent of the 8.5 million cars in Europe found to have been equipped with defeat devices.
But it also urged VW to do more to satisfy customers in Europe, who unlike their American peers have not been given any compensation over the cheating.


Closing Bell: Saudi main market sheds 85 points to finish at 11,098 

Updated 10 sec ago
Follow

Closing Bell: Saudi main market sheds 85 points to finish at 11,098 

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index closed lower in the latest session, falling 85.79 points, or 0.77 percent, to finish at 11,098.06. 

The MSCI Tadawul 30 Index declined 0.63 percent to close at 1,495.23, while the parallel market index Nomu dropped 0.91 percent to 23,548.56.  

Market breadth was firmly negative, with 42 gainers against 218 decliners on the main market. Trading activity saw 226 million shares exchanged, with total turnover reaching SR4.5 billion ($1.19 billion).  

Among the session’s gainers, Tourism Enterprise Co. rose 9.40 percent to SR15.02. SHL Finance Co. advanced 4.51 percent to SR16.00, while Almasar Alshamil for Education Co. gained 3.56 percent to SR23.88.  

Dar Alarkan Real Estate Development Co. added 3.03 percent to SR19.70, and Banque Saudi Fransi climbed 2.61 percent to SR19.30. 

On the losing side, Almasane Alkobra Mining Co. recorded the steepest decline, falling 6.61 percent to SR96.

Al Moammar Information Systems Co. dropped 5.14 percent to SR164.20, while National Company for Learning and Education declined 4.60 percent to SR124.30. Saudi Ceramic Co. slipped 4.14 percent to SR27.30, and Arabian Contracting Services Co. fell 4.12 percent to SR116.50. 

On the announcement front, Saudi Telecom Co. announced the distribution of interim cash dividends for the fourth quarter of 2025 in line with its approved dividend policy.  

The company will distribute SR2.74 billion, equivalent to SR0.55 per share, to shareholders for the quarter.  

The number of shares eligible for dividends stands at approximately 4.99 billion shares. The eligibility date has been set for Feb. 23, with distribution scheduled for March 12.  

The company noted that treasury shares are not entitled to dividends and that payments will be made through Riyad Bank via direct transfer to shareholders’ bank accounts. stc shares last traded at SR44.80, unchanged on the session. 

Separately, National Environmental Recycling Co., known as Tadweer, reported its annual financial results for the year ended Dec. 31, 2025, posting significant growth in revenue and profit.  

Revenue rose 53.5 percent year on year to SR1.24 billion, compared with SR806 million in the previous year. Net profit attributable to shareholders increased 68.4 percent to SR60.9 million, up from SR36.2 million a year earlier, driven by higher sales volumes and operational expansion.

Tadweer shares last traded at SR3.80, up 2.70 percent.