Whatβs Going On Here?BMW doesnβt want to alarm anyone, but the German automaker reported a weaker-than-expected second quarter on Wednesday β and its first quarterly loss in over ten years. What Does This Mean?BMWβs quarterly loss was almost inevitable: showrooms were forced to shut, consumers forced to stay home, and businesses forced to delay big purchases β like car fleets β in an effort to save what money they could. But that loss was still worse than investors had predicted, and came with more bad news: BMW admitted its profit this year would be significantly below last yearβs total, and that its βfree cash flowβ β that is, the amount left over after making the necessary reinvestments into the business β would be zilch. That might explain why its stock fell 5% on Wednesday. Why Should I Care?For markets: Itβs a carpool. Itβs not just BMW thatβs been T-boned by coronavirus: Volkswagen, the worldβs biggest carmaker, recently reported a loss of almost $3 billion and cut its dividend, while Mercedes-maker Daimler said it would need to cut 20,000 jobs. Even the excitement surrounding electric vehicles (EVs) might now be waning: EV-maker and stock market newbie Nikola saw its stock fall 20% after its earnings report this week β and backers of investor-favorite Tesla could be getting nervous too.
The bigger picture: Make that a convoy. Continental β one of the worldβs biggest suppliers of auto parts β also revealed a quarterly loss on Wednesday, going to show the knock-on effect of reduced car sales. The German company is expecting 20% less demand for parts this quarter versus a year ago, perhaps because of all the unsold cars sellers need to make their way through first (tweet this). And with that, Continentalβs name was added to the ever-growing list of companies choosing not to forecast their future earningsβ¦ |