Skip to main content

Deutz releases Q1 financial results

Engine firm Deutz has announced its financial results for the first quarter of 2015. The firm says that business performance is in line with expectations. The company has seen a decline in unit sales and revenue due to the effects of advance production of engines in the previous financial year. However welcome news is that it has experienced a five-fold increase in operating profit. The new orders received by the Deutz Group during the reporting period totalled €321.0 million, down by 22.5% from the previ
May 5, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Deutz will be ready for the upcoming Stage V emissions regulations
Engine firm 201 Deutz has announced its financial results for the first quarter of 2015. The firm says that business performance is in line with expectations. The company has seen a decline in unit sales and revenue due to the effects of advance production of engines in the previous financial year. However welcome news is that it has experienced a five-fold increase in operating profit.

The new orders received by the Deutz Group during the reporting period totalled €321.0 million, down by 22.5% from the previous year. But the first quarter was the strongest of the four quarters last year because of the high demand for engines ahead of the latest EU exhaust emissions standard. In the first quarter of 2015, new orders surpassed the figure for the fourth quarter of 2014 (€302.2 million) by 6.2%. Unit sales fell by 17%, from 44,457 engines in the first three months of last year to 36,907 engines in the same period of this year. DEUTZ had also sold more engines in the previous quarter. Revenue amounted to €318.1 million, down by 7.2% on the figure of €342.7 million reported a year earlier.

The Americas and Asia-Pacific regions achieved revenue growth, whereas the EMEA region (Europe, Middle East and Africa) saw a decline. Revenue had amounted to €352.3 million in the fourth quarter of 2014.

Despite the reduction in revenue, there was a five-fold rise in operating profit (EBIT), which climbed from €1.9 million to €10.1 million. This represents an EBIT margin of 3.2%. There were no one-off items in the period under review. The increase in the margin is in large part due to the positive impact from changes in exchange rates. Other reasons were growth in revenue from the service business and lower production costs.

Net income for the first three months of this year amounted to €7.7 million, which was up by €8.3 million compared with the same period in the previous year, when there was a net loss of €0.6 million.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Increase in distances driven in the US
    February 23, 2016
    Drivers in the US have set a new record for total distance travelled. New data released today by the U.S. Department of Transportation’s (USDOT) Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) show that US driving reached 5.0368 trillion km (3.148 trillion miles) by the end of 2015, beating the previous record of 4.8048 trillion km (3.003 trillion miles) in 2007.
  • Revenue crash hits giant European contractor STRABAG SE
    November 30, 2012
    One of Europe’s biggest construction groups, STRABAG SE, is facing tough trading conditions with “earnings significantly down,” according to its latest quarter three report. Chief executive Hans Peter Haselsteiner told World Highways that the central and east European specialist is fighting its way through a continuing downturn. “Conditions in the construction sector are becoming more difficult than we have been accustomed to in recent years,” he said. And this has been the case since “our half-year results
  • Volvo CE posts 6% Q4 sales increase
    February 4, 2021
    After a steep drop in demand in the first half of 2020 due to the Covid-19 pandemic, Volvo Construction Equipment (Volvo CE) says it has recovered well and achieved improvements in both sales and operating income in the fourth quarter of the year.
  • 9% profit rise for merged HaskoningDHV
    September 6, 2012
    The combined half-year accounts of the merged Royal Haskoning and DHV showed profits up 9% despite the tough market conditions. Both former companies contributed equally to an operating profit (EBITA) over the first six months of 2012 at €13.9 million.