BMW hit by China lull
August 4, 2015Earnings before interest and tax dropped by 3 percent in the second quarter year-on-year, BMW Group reported Tuesday.
The company's net profit declined by 1.1 percent in the same period, totaling 1.75 billion euros ($1.92 billion).
The group emphasized the drop came despite a weaker euro, helping to drive a 20-percent jump in group sales to 23.9 billion euros.
Shipments of its main BMW brand cars grew by 4.9 percent, while the company said it sold almost a quarter more of its Mini cars, with sales of its luxury Rolls-Royce vehicles down 7.7 percent on the second quarter of 2014.
All eyes on China
BMW board members attributed the fall in income to a weaker Chinese market as growth in the world's most important auto market continued slowing.
"The Chinese market is normalizing, thereby becoming increasingly competitive," BMW said in a statement, adding that the company was well positioned to gain from a future pick-up.
"In the medium and long term, we remain utterly convinced of China's potential for growth, given the comparatively low rate of vehicle ownership, the country's well-developed infrastructure and the strong affinity of the fast growing middle class for brands," BMW Chief Financial Officer Friedrich Eichiner added.
hg/cjc (AFP, dpa, AP)