BMW will step up cost cutting in anticipation of a difficult year, the German car maker said on Friday, as it reported a 7.9 per cent fall in 2018 operating profit due to higher investments in electric cars and currency headwinds.
“We expect strong headwinds to continue to effect the entire sector in 2019,” Chief Financial Officer Nicolas Peter said in a statement.
“In view of current developments, we intend to further broaden and significantly intensify these (cost-cutting) efforts,” he said, adding the company would reduce the number of vehicle variants on offer.
As a result, BMW will not make a successor to the 3 series Gran Turismo model, it said.
BMW’s 2018 earnings before interest and taxes fell to €9.12-billion ($10.33-billion), just ahead of the €8.94-billion forecast by analysts in a poll.
The car maker said its return on sales for its automotive division fell to 7.2 per cent from 9.2 per cent a year earlier, as investments in electric cars and a price war triggered by new emissions tests weighed on profit.