BMW sales up in Asia, N. America, flat in Europe

BMW sales up in Asia, N. America, flat in Europe
Updated on

Summary The sales of BMW have increased in Asia and North America while they remain flat in Europe.

Booming sales in China and new versions of key models pushed automaker BMW AGs earnings higher by 18 per cent in the first quarter to C1.35 billion ($1.77 billion).Sales were flat in Europe where the economy is slack, but the Munich-based maker of luxury cars and SUVs saw a 36 per cent jump in deliveries in China, where it now sells more vehicles than it does in the United States.Revenue rose 14 per cent to C18.29 billion, the company said Thursday.Sales worldwide rose 11 per cent to 425, 528. Top performers were new versions of the 1-series compact and the X3 smaller SUV. The larger X5 SUV and the large 7-series sedan, both of which reap big profit margins, also saw better sales.Sales in China outpaced those in the United States, 80,218 to 75,931. But deliveries in Europe, which is struggling with a slow economy and a crisis over too much government debt, only edged up 0.5 per cent.Analyst Max Warburton said a strong product mix emphasizing expensive vehicles with high profit margins helped alongside the higher sales numbers. He said more profitable vehicles, defined as the mid-size 5-series sedan and up, represented 50 per cent of sales.BMWs sales mix, pricing and profitability remain superb, Warburton said.BMWs profit margins -- measured as earnings before interest and taxes as a percentage of sales -- came in at 11.6 per cent, down slightly from 11.9 per cent but ahead of 11.4 per cent posted by Volkswagen unit Audi AG and 8.4 per cent for Daimler AGs Mercedes brand.Germanys luxury carmakers are making fat profits, much of it on export sales to emerging markets and the United States, while Europes mass-market carmakers such as GMs Adam Opel AG and Fiat are struggling with tough competition and weak sales and pricing.BMWs workforce grew by 5.4 per cent over the past year and it employed 101,260 people at the end of the quarter. Part of the increase came from the acquisition of the ICL Group car leasing unit, but the company said that skilled workers and engineers continue to be recruited in order to keep pace with persistently strong demand for BMW Group vehicles, to push innovations and to focus on the development of new technologies.BMW makes cars under the BMW, Mini and Rolls-Royce brands. It also sells BMW and Husqvarna motorcycles.
Browse Topics