Skip to main content

Deutz reports strong half-year results

German diesel engine maker DEUTZ is reporting strong half-year results, which it says will help the firm to invest in research and development into future powertrain solutions. The company says it has seen a marked increase in new orders and revenue as well as a significant improvement in free cash flow, while it has also benefited substantially from the sale of its former manufacturing site in Cologne. The company says that new orders in the DEUTZ Group increased by 18.6% to €803 million for the half-year,
August 3, 2017 Read time: 3 mins
German diesel engine maker 201 DEUTZ is reporting strong half-year results, which it says will help the firm to invest in research and development into future powertrain solutions. The company says it has seen a marked increase in new orders and revenue as well as a significant improvement in free cash flow, while it has also benefited substantially from the sale of its former manufacturing site in Cologne.

The company says that new orders in the DEUTZ Group increased by 18.6% to €803 million for the half-year, compared with €677.2 million for the same period in 2016. Orders in the second quarter of 2017 amounted to €399.8 million, an increase of 14.3% than for the second quarter of last year and close to the €403.2 million for first quarter of this year.

A total of 79,599 engines were sold in the six-month period, an increase of 14.2% from the 69,706 diesels sold in the same period in 2016. Meanwhile second-quarter unit sales came to 42,446 engines, 12.9% higher than for the same period in the previous year and 14.2% above the previous quarter.

Revenue rose by 14% to €734.5 million in the first half of 2017 compared with €644.4 million for the same period in 2016. The largest region, EMEA (Europe, Middle East, Africa), saw revenue grow by 17.4%, while revenue in the Americas region was up by 10.5%. Revenue in the Asia-Pacific region, however, was down by 1.3%, as the figure for the prior-year period had included licensing income. In the second quarter of 2017, revenue totalled €382 million, which was 11% higher than in the same period in 2016 and 8.4% more than in the first quarter of this year. At €22.8 million, operating profit (EBIT before exceptional items) was up by €2.1 million on the first half of 2016. This more than compensated for the €5.5 million contribution to earnings from a licensing transaction in the prior-year period. However, the absence of this contribution did result in the EBIT margin falling slightly to 3.1%, compared with 3.2% in the first half of 2016. At €19.8 million, net income in the six month period was on a par with the prior-year period. Free cash flow improved to reach €53.8 million.

“Since the beginning of 2017, we have seen a positive market trend that is still ongoing. The property sale of the former Cologne-Deutz site was a milestone in the second quarter of 2017,” said DEUTZ’s chief financial officer, Dr Margarete Haase.

“Going forward, we will be positioning ourselves much more strongly as a supplier of innovative drive systems and focusing on alternative fuels,” said Chairman of the DEUTZ Board of Management Dr Frank Hiller. “The new E-DEUTZ strategy, for example, includes hybrid solutions, partial electrification and electric drive components. And the proceeds from the sale of property are allowing us to invest even more heavily in technology, innovation and service.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • European construction equipment industry stages 'grand comeback' in 2021
    March 4, 2022
    Demand for construction equipment in Europe continued to grow in 2021, after the industry had already seen a return to growth in the second half of 2020 when the impact of the pandemic was receding.
  • Italian construction machine firms bullish
    February 2, 2017
    Improving sales of construction machines by Italian manufacturers are resulting in greater business confidence amongst these firms. According to the Italian construction machine manufacturing association, UNACEA, the machine sales figures for 2016 saw a notable improvement over the results for 2015. During 2016, 10,984 construction machines of various types were sold in the Italian market. This was a 26% increase over the numbers sold in the previous year. The UNACEA data shows that 10,517 earthmoving machi
  • British Steel pushes its long bar and special profile steel products
    April 26, 2018
    British Steel is re-establishing itself in the construction equipment market as a supplier of long product steel and special profiles. British Steel as an entity disappeared with its acquisition first by Corus in 1999 and then Tata in 2007, re-emerging in 2016 as an independent company – having bought back its name for £1. The company supplies long bars to manufacturers such as Caterpillar to build undercarriages, as well as crane rails, and bucket and cutting-edge profiles to various customers. Forks and
  • Wacker Neuson’s dual power 803 works inside the Kocher Viaduct
    May 1, 2015
    Wacker Neuson’s smallest excavator, the 803 dual power, is punching above its weight on the Kocher Viaduct demolition project near Heilbronn in Germany. The electric-hydraulic and diesel-powered mini-excavator can fully deploy its advantages with emission-free work in confined spaces on site where construction company Leonhard Weiss is reconstructing the viaduct. At 185m, the Kocher viaduct is the highest bridge in Germany. Around 50,000 vehicles cross it daily. The Kocher viaduct was designed as a pr