Skip to main content

Rolls Royce bullish on strong results

The Rolls Royce business unit Power Systems is bullish with its strong results.
By MJ Woof March 5, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
CEO of Rolls-Royce Power Systems and president of the Rolls-Royce Power Systems business unit Andreas Schell together with Louise Öfverström, CFO of Rolls-Royce Power Systems

The Rolls-Royce business unit Power Systems has increased its revenue and profit in 2019. The firm says that its revenue saw growth and reached €4.04 billion for the 2019 financial year.

The firm says that the Power Systems division overcame difficult market conditions in 2019 to deliver the strong full-year result. Revenue increased by 4%, topping €4 billion for the first time.

Operating profit grew by 15% to €407 million, corresponding to an adjusted return on sales of 10.1% and an increase from 9.2% for 2018. Now generating 23% of overall revenue at British technology group Rolls-Royce, Power Systems remains the firm’s second largest business unit.

“What stands out is that we have once again managed to strengthen the position of our MTU-brand products and solutions on a deteriorating market. That gives us a solid basis for further enhancing our profile as a provider of climate- and eco-friendly integrated drive and energy solutions. With them, we’re not only accelerating the energy turnaround, but consistently implementing our PS 2030 vision,” said Andreas Schell, CEO of Rolls-Royce Power Systems.

Revenue from service activities and products increased by 4% across all segments, contributing some 33% of total revenue in the business unit. “All our financial figures point to a healthy business unit that has achieved profitable growth for three years in a row. With adjusted revenue passing the €4 billion mark for the first time and the competitive edge we’ve gained, we can safely say that 2019 was a very good year for the business,” summed up CFO Louise Öfverström.

The order book was €3.44 billion at the end of 2019, just 5.6% below last year’s level. Among the drivers were major contracts sealed in the Far East, where Power Systems has entered into new markets.

In 2020, growth of the Power Systems business unit is expected to be on the moderate side. The faltering economic conditions that defined the second half of 2019 will continue to be felt in the first half of this year and may still deteriorate – largely due to the consequences of the Covid-19 disease. Economic recovery in the second half of the year is still a possibility, however. “But achieving the business outcomes we want in 2020 is going to be a big challenge,” concluded Öfverström.

Related Content

  • Wacker Neuson improves Q3 earnings in despite challenges
    November 14, 2016
    Light and compact equipment manufacturer Wacker Neuson Group saw revenue and earnings for the third quarter of 2016 increase relative to 2015. The company said that seen over a nine-month period, revenue remained at the prior-year level, balancing out the drop in earnings experienced during the first half of the year only partly. Despite adverse market factors, including ongoing crises in many emerging markets and key industries such as the agricultural sector, the oil and gas industry and mining, gro
  • EBRD continues supporting infrastructure investment
    January 21, 2014
    The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) says it has provided strong support to emerging economies in 2013. Much of this investment has been into transportation infrastructure, which the EBRD sees as being crucial for development and to help emerge economies into growth. Total investments for the year across all of the regions where the EBRD is active amounted to €8.5 billion, according to preliminary estimates, compared with financing of €8.9 billion the previous year. These investments
  • VDMA bullish
    March 5, 2012
    A positive outlook of business has been revealed by the German equipment manufacturers association, the VDMA.
  • Looking around the world with bitumen technology
    March 4, 2015
    Russia needs polymer-modified bitumen; the UK is embracing US-style pavement preservation technology and gearing up to import more bitumen; and Italy prepares to export innovative modifying technology; plus a look at the market in Asia Pacific and the Middle East – Kristina Smith reports. The Total Group has announced two recent deals which underline the changing bitumen market around the world. In Moscow, it is constructing a new type of polymer-modified bitumen (PMB) plant in joint venture with Gazprom Ne