Business

BMW profits drop as China Covid-19 lockdowns knock production

Figure falls to €3 billion from €4.8 billion in same period last year

Updated 1 year ago · Published on 03 Aug 2022 3:35PM

BMW profits drop as China Covid-19 lockdowns knock production
BMW said economic conditions would ‘remain difficult’ in the second half of the year, with the war in Ukraine also disrupting supply and weighing on the industry. – AFP pic, August 3, 2022

FRANKFURT – German auto manufacturer BMW said today its profits dipped in the second quarter as supply bottlenecks and Chinese lockdowns knocked production.

The carmaker’s profits for the period between April and June fell to €3 billion (RM13.6 billion) from €4.8 billion in the same period last year.

BMW CEO Oliver Zipse recognised “unfavourable conditions” but said in a statement the Munich-based group had shown “a high degree of resilience”.

“Ongoing semiconductor supply issues and supply chain disruptions following Covid-19 lockdowns in China”, a key market for automakers, held back production in the first half of the year, BMW said in a statement.

BMW shipped just over 563,000 units in the second quarter of 2022, a drop of 19.8%.

Like other premium carmakers, the limits to production meant that BMW leant more heavily on its top-of-the-range models with bigger margins.

The group benefited from this better “product mix” and higher prices for its vehicles, which partially offset the fall in the number of vehicles sold, BMW said.

BMW said economic conditions would “remain difficult” in the second half of the year, with the war in Ukraine also disrupting supply and weighing on the industry.

Unit sales in the second half would be “solidly higher”, BMW said, but would “not fully compensate for lost volume” in the first half, meaning deliveries of its vehicles would now be “slightly below” the level of last year.

Strong demand and recent tight supply meant BMW had an “above-average order bank”.

But high inflation on the back of soaring energy prices would cool the economy and see BMW’s order backlog “normalise towards the end of the year”.

BMW’s predictions did not take into account the impact that a cut to Russian gas supplies to Europe could have on its production locally. – AFP, August 3, 2022

Related News

Malaysia / 1mth

Mechanic selling his beloved BMW to pay for son’s cancer treatment

World / 2mth

Not made in China: Australia eyes other big opportunities in Asia

World / 2mth

Navigating maritime anxieties between Australia and Asean

Malaysia / 3mth

Govt to send Malaysians to study TVET in China - Ahmad Zahid

Malaysia / 3mth

MMEA saves sailors aboard sinking Chinese yacht in South China Sea

Malaysia / 3mth

Singaporean alleges Malaysian workshop owner called him ‘l*nsi’

Spotlight

Malaysia

Usno leader calls for Sabah govt overhaul after legal blunder

By Jason Santos

World

Iran president, foreign minister die in copter crash

Malaysia

UiTM vice-chancellor denies students in black are protesters

Malaysia

PAS denounces Teresa Kok death threat

Malaysia

UiTM admissions backlash sign of misplaced priorities, say academics

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Teresa Kok gets 2 bullets in mailbox