One stat leapt out from the Audi Group’s financial results from the first quarter of 2024: Lamborghini made more money than Audi. Bentley came close, too.
That’s overall operating profit, not just profit per car. We all know how good margins can be on selling luxury motors, but Lamborghini delivered just 2630 cars in the quarter, compared with Audi's 397,000.
From those deliveries, Lamborghini booked profits of €187 million (£161m), compared with €135m for Audi. Bentley made €120m from 2506 cars sold.
Audi margins stood at just 1.1%, compared with 27% for Lamborghini and 17% for Bentley. That dragged the overall Audi Group margin down to 3.4% – worse even than the Dieselgate fine year of 2016 and Covid-battered 2020.
The first three months were tough for all three German premium brands, as profits plunged from the highs of a year ago on returning supply and higher interest rates. However, BMW still managed an 8.8% margin on profits of €2.71 billion for its automotive division and Mercedes-Benz achieved 8.6% from €2.46bn profit. JLR meanwhile tore past Audi with profits of £661m in the same three months for a 9.2% margin on sales a quarter of Audi’s.
So what happened at Audi?
Audi has been subject to intense scrutiny in recent months within the Volkswagen Group. Group CEO Oliver Blume complained last June that the brand was “lagging the competition”, soon after which Audi CEO Markus Duesmann was replaced with Gernot Döllner, a former Porsche executive. More recently, head of design Marc Lichte was replaced with former JLR design director Massimo Frascella.
But Audi margins had mostly held up until this quarter. Audi’s Brand Group Progressive was the weak link in the Volkswagen Group’s first-quarter result as the Core brand group (Volkswagen, Skoda, Seat and Cupra) actually lifted profits from the same period the year before.
The Audi Group’s revenue was “significantly below last year's level”, Volkswagen Group chief financial officer Arno Antlitz said on the firm's earnings call, while Audi spoke of “extraordinary challenges” in the first three months on its own earnings call.
Chief among those, according to Antlitz, was constrained supply of V6 and V8 engines, which prevented Audi from building enough of its most profitable models.
Audi didn’t elaborate on the problem, but German publication Manager Magazin has reported that it was the Vitesco-supplied 48V starter-generator at fault. Fitted to both diesel and petrol versions of models such as the Q7 and Q8, the mild-hybrid system has been a weak link in terms of reliability and is presumably being overhauled, hence the production pause.
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