Porsche CEO sticks to targets as he navigates road to recovery

Summary

  • Porsche forecasts 5.5% to 7.5% margin this year after 1.1% in 2025
  • Details on recovery plan due in October
  • CEO pledged to focus on high-margin vehicles and cost-cutting

BERLIN, (Reuters) – Porsche faces ‌fundamental challenges in crucial markets and a long road back to recovery, but the German sports car maker is sticking by this year’s financial targets, its CEO will tell investors on ​Tuesday.

A profit warning from premium rival BMW last week, citing a prolonged ​downturn in China and rising costs resulting from the Iran war, ⁠has prompted analysts to look more closely at other carmakers’ targets for the ​year.

Porsche continues to expect its operating margin to recover to between 5.5% and 7.5% ​this year despite persistent challenges in key markets, CEO Michael Leiters is set to say at the company’s AGM, according to speech text published online ahead of the meeting.

“In the short term, ​we will not see a return to the targeted margins we have seen ​in the past,” the speech says, highlighting U.S. tariffs and Chinese competition as major challenges.

RECOVERY PLAN ‌DETAILS ⁠EXPECTED IN OCTOBER

Leiters, however, confirmed the 2026 forecast “despite the environment remaining very challenging”.

Investors will be eager to hear how the new CEO plans to restore the fortunes of the Stuttgart-based maker of the 911 sports car, which is part of the Volkswagen ​group, after its ​operating margin slumped ⁠to 1.1% last year.

Leiters, who took over from Volkswagen CEO Oliver Blume at the start of the year, has pledged a ​shift to higher-margin sports cars and intensified cost cuts, promising ​details of ⁠his recovery plan at a capital markets day in October.

“We shareholders look at Porsche today and see a shambles,” Deka investment fund manager Ingo Speich will tell management, according ⁠to ​excerpts from the text of his speech.

Porsche’s strong ​brand gives grounds for optimism, but the company must simplify its product offering in a more focused strategy, ​Speich is set to say.

Reporting by Rachel More Editing by Tomasz Janowski and David Goodman