close

Chrysler expected to post profit

By David Mchugh Ap Business Writer 3 min read

FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) – DaimlerChrysler’s U.S. arm Chrysler is expected to post a small operating profit for the first quarter, climbing back into the black after six quarters of losses, DaimlerChrysler chief executive Juergen Schrempp said Wednesday. Schrempp didn’t offer specific numbers but told the company’s shareholders’ meeting in Berlin that “based on the company’s most current information, after six consecutive negative quarters, the Chrysler Group will report slightly positive operating results for the first quarter of 2002.”

The first quarter ended March 31, but detailed earnings won’t be announced until the end of April.

Operating results ignore financial items such as interest and taxes, and the cost of Chrysler’s ongoing three year restructuring. But many auto analysts look to the operating figure as the best clue to the health of a company’s core business.

Schrempp has endured sharp shareholder criticism for taking Daimler-Benz into a 1998 merger with the U.S. automaker in an attempt to forge a global auto giant. Turning around Chrysler would be a big step toward justifying his grand strategy, which also saw the company take a 37 percent stake in Mitsubishi of Japan.

It also would open another chapter in Chrysler’s history, which included a 1980 U.S. government bailout to save it from bankruptcy and profits in the 1980s and 1990s under the charismatic Lee Iacocca. Then came the merger and the plunge back into the red as Chrysler was battered by slowing sales, a price war with U.S. rivals General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co., and turmoil as top managers left.

Chrysler head Dieter Zetsche, a former Mercedes-Benz executive, has been leading a cost-cutting campaign at the U.S. group, headquartered in Auburn Hills, Mich. Chrysler lost 5.3 billion euros ($4.7 billion) last year including the costs of the restructuring, which includes closing six plants and eliminating 26,000 jobs, about 20 percent of Chrysler’s work force.

Schrempp also said DaimlerChrysler as a whole was sticking with its earlier forecast that the parent company would more than double its 2001 operating profit of 1.3 billion euros ($1.1 billion) in 2002.

Including one-time costs such as the restructuring expenses, DaimlerChrysler posted a loss of 1.3 billion euros ($1.1 billion) last year.

Schrempp also reiterated that the carmaker wouldn’t reach an earlier target of operating profits between 5.5 billion euros ($4.8 billion) and 6.5 billion euros ($5.2 billion) this year.

“Due to projected economic trends, we will only be able to achieve these targets at a somewhat later date,” he said. Some securities analysts have expressed frustration at Schrempp’s pronouncements on future earnings, saying they are too vague.

Schrempp also said “a positive trend is beginning to emerge” at the commercial vehicles division, which includes the Mercedes-Benz truck operations in Europe and the Portland, Ore.-based truck and bus maker Freightliner. The division has been battered by the recession and the company is in the middle of another turnaround program at Freightliner.

Financial markets reacted coolly to Schrempp’s comments, with the shares little changed at 50.10 euros ($44.09) in Frankfurt. In early trading on the New York Stock Exchange, DaimlerChrysler shares were up 14 cents at $44.30.

Krista Kepler, an analyst at Merck Finck and Co. in Munich, said it was too early to bet on a strong year for the automaker.

“If they run into trouble it’ll be in the third quarter,” a typically weak time for auto sales, said Kepler, whose operating forecast for Chrysler for the year is “around break even.”

Net earnings will still be weighed down by restructuring costs, she said.

CUSTOMER LOGIN

If you have an account and are registered for online access, sign in with your email address and password below.

NEW CUSTOMERS/UNREGISTERED ACCOUNTS

Never been a subscriber and want to subscribe, click the Subscribe button below.

Starting at $4.79/week.

Subscribe Today