Currently reading: Audi Group forecasts operating margin dip after record 2022

Audi, Bentley, Ducati and Lamborghini set £6.7 billion profit high as average sale values spike

The Audi Group expects its operating margin to dip this year as supply shortages ease and sales volumes begin to rebound.

The group – comprising Audi, Bentley, Ducati and Lamborghini – set a 12.2% margin last year, thanks to an increase in the value per vehicle sold and positive effects from hedging raw materials.

This meant it made a €7.6 billion (£6.7bn) operating profit in 2022, up 37.3% compared with the previous record set the year prior.

However, the Group now predicts this will fall somewhere between 9% and 11% in 2023, coinciding with a rebound in sales volumes as the supply shortage eases.

Audi finance chief Jürgen Rittersberger said: "If we look at 2023, what I can say is that supply situation will improve and has already improved. So from my point of view, we will see a kind of a normalisation this year. 

"But on the other hand, there was or there will be still some disruptions coming from the well-known problems: logistic chains, but also supply chains, especially [for] semiconductors. So I think 2023 is a kind of normalisation but not fully normal."

This mirrors the strategy of the wider Volkswagen Group (the Audi Group's parent company), which forecasts a stabilisation in margins at 7.9%.

This is because the relaxation of the semiconductor crisis is expected to tip the balance back towards buyers by the third quarter of 2023, Volkswagen Group chief financial officer Arno Antlitz said earlier this week. In turn, the competition among manufacturers will heat up.

Read more: Investors worry as Volkswagen prioritises growth over profit

As such, the Audi Group expects its sales to grow from 1.6 million last year to between 1.8 million and 1.9 million in 2023.

This volume increase will be led by Audi. Of the Group’s 1,638,638 deliveries in 2022, just 24,407 did not come from the German brand. 

In turn, high-end siblings Bentley and Lamborghini – which both set record sales volumes in 2022 as the Volkswagen Group used its most profitable brands to reinforce its coffers – may well reduce their delivery targets.

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For reference, Bentley sold 11,006 cars in pre-pandemic 2019 but 15,174 last year, while Lamborghini delivered 8205 in 2019 and 9233 in 2022.

This helped both brands to enjoy record years for profitability. Bentley generated €708 million (£623m), almost doubling the €389m (£342m) record it set a year ago, giving it a 20.9% operating margin. Meanwhile, Lamborghini made €614m (£540m), giving it a 25.9% margin.

A spike in the average value of each car sold – the which was the “best in class”, according to Lamborghini CFO Paolo Poma – contributed to this success.

Bentley CFO Jan-Henrik Lafrentz added that the strategy to drive value per car upwards was “very clearly the main driver” and that the British firm was “probably starting to realise the full potential of our Mulliner [personalisation] brand”.

The Audi Group's research and development spend grew by 15.5% year on year to €4.5bn (£4.0bn), owing to the consolidation of Bentley and investments in electrification.

It sold 118,196 electric cars in 2022, a 44% increase compared with 2021, and will expand its portfolio with the Audi Q6 E-tron being unveiled in the second half of 2023.

Audi will detail a new product initative later this year, with 20 new models (half of these being electric) planned to hit the market by 2025. 

Charlie Martin

Charlie Martin Autocar
Title: Editorial assistant, Autocar

As part of Autocar’s news desk, Charlie plays a key role in the title’s coverage of new car launches and industry events. He’s also a regular contributor to its social media channels, providing videos for Instagram, Tiktok, Facebook and Twitter.

Charlie joined Autocar in July 2022 after a nine-month stint as an apprentice with sister publication What Car?, during which he acquired his gold-standard NCTJ diploma with the Press Association.

Charlie is the proud owner of a Fiat Panda 100HP, which he swears to be the best car in the world. Until it breaks.

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