The billions in costs for the combustion engine extension almost completely wiped out the profits of the sports and off-road vehicle manufacturer Porsche in the first three quarters. Earnings after taxes fell by 95.9 percent year-on-year to just 114 million euros, as the company announced. From July to September, the Stuttgart-based company even reported red numbers: Earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) were minus 966 million euros. In the same quarter of the previous year, there was an increase of 974 million euros. The main negative factor is the management’s strategic shift around Porsche boss Oliver Blume: Most recently, the ambitious electric targets were canceled – and the planned battery production with them. The launch of new electric models has also been postponed. In view of the “market realities and customer needs”, the aim is instead to achieve a comeback of the combustion engine well into the next decade. The measures cost a lot of money: special costs of around 3.1 billion euros are expected in the 2025 financial year, it was said. Porsche should improve “noticeably” from 2026 onwards. The operating profit in the first nine months was 40 million euros – and therefore 99 percent below the previous year’s figure of a good four billion euros. Sales fell by six percent to just under 26.9 billion euros. According to CFO Jochen Breckner, the results reflect the burdens of the strategic realignment: “We are consciously accepting temporarily weaker financial indicators in order to strengthen Porsche’s resilience and profitability in the long term.” However, the manager was confident: “We expect that we will pass the low point this year and that Porsche will noticeably improve from 2026 onwards.” The Stuttgart-based company has mostly raced from success to success in the recent past – and for a long time brought a large part of the profits into the coffers of the parent company Volkswagen. In recent months, however, the sports car manufacturer has become a company in crisis mode. China is no longer running. In addition to the sluggish e-car ramp-up and US tariffs, Porsche also has problems in its day-to-day business. The sports car manufacturer is heading for its second year of negative sales. A good 215,500 vehicles were delivered from January to September. Six percent less than a year earlier. Things went significantly worse, especially in China. In the first nine months of the year, the Swabians sold almost 32,200 cars in the People’s Republic – around 26 percent less than in the same period last year. Porsche had already had to give up in the country. For comparison: In the same period in 2022, the group sold a good 68,700 vehicles there with total sales of around 221,500. “In China, the luxury market has completely collapsed,” Blume said recently. As a result, a quarter of Porsche’s previous total volume is no longer available. Blume, who has also led Volkswagen since September 2022, will be at the helm of the sports car manufacturer until the end of the year. He then moves completely to Wolfsburg. At the beginning of 2026, former McLaren manager Michael Leiters will take over the Porsche leadership position. Board of directors negotiates savings package with works council In view of the economic problems, Porsche has to take the red pencil – and its structures are shrinking. By 2029, around 1,900 jobs are to be cut in a socially acceptable manner in the Stuttgart region. In addition, the contracts of around 2,000 temporary employees are expiring.More on the topicAnother savings program is to be put together in the coming weeks. Negotiations are currently underway with the works council. Breckner further said: “We have to assume that the general conditions will not improve in the foreseeable future. That’s why we have to talk about far-reaching approaches in all areas – also in the context of the future package.” According to dpa information, in addition to additional job cuts, job security is also likely to be up for debate. The company and the works council want to provide information about the results of the discussions once they have been concluded.
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