China woes hit BMW as profit margin falls

Summary

  • Q2 EBIT margin falls to 8.4% from 9.2%, below analysts consensus
  • Shares fall 3.8%
  • China sales fall 4% in first half but less than peers
  • BMW investing heavily in model revamps
  • No change in guidance for 2024

BERLIN, (Reuters) – BMW reported a lower-than-expected profit margin in its core automotive segment during the second quarter on Thursday, hitting its shares as heightened competition and weaker demand in China weighs on the sector.

The German automaker’s earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) margin in its car segment fell to 8.4% from 9.2% in the same period last year, falling short of the 8.7% expected by analysts, according to a company-compiled consensus.

The shares were trading 3.8% lower at 0727 GMT.

BMW and its peers are under pressure in their key market China, where local carmakers are gaining share with lower-cost electric vehicles, forcing their European rivals to slash prices.

The Munich-based carmaker saw a 4% slump in its China sales in the first six months of the year but performed better in the region than Volkswagen and Mercedes.

BMW expects the economic situation in China to stabilise in the third quarter, it said in a statement.

EV GROWTH STRONG

Carmakers are under pressure to ramp up their electric vehicle offerings as regulatory deadlines from China to the European Union and some U.S. states will begin to ban sales of new fossil fuel emitting cars from the middle of the next decade.

BMW, whose heavy investment in model revamps also weighed on second-quarter results, is seeing strong demand for its all-electric models, setting the company apart from its rivals.

“In our view, e-mobility will continue to be the core drive technology of the future and our primary growth driver,” CEO Oliver Zipse said in a speech to investors, adding that BMW was the world’s third-largest e-car manufacturer.

BMW and its smaller brands Mini and Rolls-Royce increased sales of purely electric cars by a quarter to just over 190,000 in the first half of 2024.

Pointing to broader structural headwinds in the auto sector, finance chief Walter Mertl said BMW was seeing additional requests for support within its supply chain.

The group held its guidance for 2024, flagging a slight decline in pre-tax earnings, assuming that the geopolitical and macroeconomic situation does not deteriorate, Mertl said.

The company’s full-year target range for the EBIT margin in its car segment is 8-10%.

Additional reporting by Ilona Wissenbach in Frankfurt, Editing by Miranda Murray, Miral Fahmy, Elaine Hardcastle