Skip to main content

Engine maker Deutz dumps full-year 2015 forecast amid poor trading

German engine maker Deutz Group said it will not meet its forecast for the current financial year. A sluggish second quarter with “very low” new orders means revenue is expected to fall by around 20% compared with the forecasted 10% drop, according to a corporate statement. “Consequently, the second half of 2015 will be significantly worse than the first half of the year,” the statement said. “Given the low level of business, Deutz will only be just about break even in terms of EBIT this year. Unt
September 16, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
German engine maker 201 Deutz Group said it will not meet its forecast for the current financial year.

A sluggish second quarter with “very low” new orders means revenue is expected to fall by around 20% compared with the forecasted 10% drop, according to a corporate statement.

“Consequently, the second half of 2015 will be significantly worse than the first half of the year,” the statement said.
 
“Given the low level of business, Deutz will only be just about break even in terms of EBIT this year. Until now, an EBIT margin of roughly 3% had been expected. Further measures to improve earnings are under review.
 
Furthermore, the current reluctance to invest on the part of end customers means that the inventories of a number of European customers that were built up last year in anticipation of the new emissions standards are being used up more slowly than predicted.”

Deutz said it will carry out further analysis of its situation and will not make any forecasts for 2016 at this point in time.

Deutz announced its financial results for the first half of 2015 in August. New orders, which totalled €670.7 million, were down by 10.2% on the figure of €746.8 million reported for the first half of 2014.

However, the level of new orders had risen during the year, with the total volume of €349.7 million in the second quarter of 2015 representing a year-on-year rise of 5.1% (Q2 2014: €332.6 million). This was also a quarter-on-quarter rise of 8.9% (Q1 2015: €321.0 million).

In the first six months of the year, unit sales fell by 21.2%, from 99,079 engines to 78,120 engines. Sales of 41,213 engines in the second quarter of 2015 were 11.7% higher than in the previous quarter but were 24.5% lower than in prior-year quarter (Q2 2014: 54,622 engines).

Revenue was in line with forecasts, falling by 11% year on year to €670.2 million compared with €753.4 million in the first half of 2014.

The revenue decline was attributed to the changes to emissions standards for engines under 130kW that came into force in the European Union on 1 October 2014 and to the resulting effects from the advance production of engines.

The Americas and Asia-Pacific regions achieved revenue growth, whereas the EMEA (Europe, Middle East and Africa) region saw a decline. In the second quarter of 2015, revenue stood at €352.1 million, which was a 10.7% increase on the previous quarter but a 14.3% decrease on the same period in 2014.

Despite the fall in revenue, Deutz noted that operating profit (EBIT before one-off items) remained level with the comparable prior-year period (H1 2014: € 20.1 million).

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Astec Industries appoints new president and CEO
    July 23, 2019
    Astec Industries has appointed Barry Ruffalo as its president and chief executive officer, effective on August 12th, 2019. Ruffalo has also been elected to the board of directors. He will join the board of directors as a Class I director and will stand for re-election at the Company’s 2020 annual meeting. On the effective date of Ruffalo’s appointment, Richard Dorris, interim chief executive officer, will resume his role as chief operating officer. Prior to his appointment, Ruffalo was employed by Valmont
  • IAM says more action needed to cut UK road casualty numbers
    November 1, 2012
    IAM (Institute of Advanced Motorists) director Neil Greig said “much more” needed to be done to sustain an encouraging drop in the latest published quarterly road casualty statistics for the UK. The latest Department for Transport figures revealed 400 people were killed in road accidents in Britain between April-June 2012 – down 18% than the 487 killed over the same period of 2011. The total number of casualties was 47,880 between April-June 2012, a fall of 7% on the 51,580 in Q2 2011.
  • Strabag chief executive promises response to tougher trading conditions
    August 31, 2012
    Strabag chief executive, Hans Peter Haselsteiner, has spoken of the need for the Group to respond to tougher future trading conditions after its half year 2012 earnings fell, as expected, substantially from 2011 levels. New figures published by the Austrian construction giants revealed that its EBITDA was € 16.14 million between
  • Liebherr bullish with strong results
    April 5, 2022
    Liebherr is bullish with strong financial results.