Porsche Is the Latest in a Growing List of Automakers Hitting the Brakes on EV Ambitions - đź”” The Liberty Daily
(ZeroHedge)—Earlier today, shares of Porsche AG in Germany plunged the most on record after the struggling sports car maker announced it would scale back its electric vehicle (EV) rollout. Porsche scrapped plans for a future battery-powered luxury SUV and shifted focus back to petrol-powered engines and hybrid models. This move will result in a $2.1 billion hit to operating profit and force both Porsche and its parent, Volkswagen AG, to revise their full-year forecasts.
“Markets are led lower by Autos, STOXX Europe 600 Automobiles & Parts Index [SXAP] is down 2.8%, following the two profit warnings from Porsche and Volkswagen after the close on Friday. Porsche AG is down 7.8% and Volkswagen is down 8%,” UBS analyst Marisa Vethanayagam wrote in a client update earlier.
Friday’s profit warning marked the fourth time this year that Porsche cut guidance, with shares down 28% year-to-date. The slump has pushed the automaker so low that it is now set to be removed from the DAX, Germany’s benchmark index.
Porsche’s mounting troubles – compounded by muted EV sales in key markets and intensifying competition from Chinese automakers – are increasingly weighing on its parent, Volkswagen. On Friday, Volkswagen warned it would take a $3.5 billion non-cash impairment tied to Porsche’s hit to operating profit and lowered its forecast for operating return on sales this year to 2% to 3%, down from 5%.
Besides Porsche and Volkswagen, other European peers, such as Stellantis NV and Renault SA, are also struggling with dismal EV demand after they invested billions of dollars in the technology.
Industry-wide across the continent, the MSCI Europe Autos Index is down 6% year-to-date, hovering on a fine line of support around 160 euros.
Here’s commentary from top Wall Street research desks on Porsche scaling back its EV unit, resulting in a guidance cut and dragging down peers across the continent (courtesy of Bloomberg):
RBC (Sector perform, PT EU43)Matthias Schmidt, an independent auto analyst based near Hamburg, told Bloomberg that auto buyers “are putting little value on luxury electric cars,” adding, “Porsche has now realized this and is jumping back into high-margin combustion-engine models.”
Not surprising…