Filed under: BMW, Earnings/Financials
BMW is planning a fairly extensive overhaul in a bid to recoup some its annual costs, with CEO
Norbert Reithofer (pictured above) aiming to save three to four billion euro ($4 to $5.4 billion) per year to help keep the company's profit margins between eight and 10 percent, while also maintaining investments in production expansion and new tech. BMW's profit margins sat at 9.4 percent in 2013.
According to
Automotive News Europe,
Reithofer is none too pleased about costs at
Mini and on the
1 Series, although neither AN nor its source story, from Germany's
Manager Magazin, elaborate on what steps could be taken to improve losses on either project. That makes it hard to figure out just where the fat will be trimmed from.
What may happen, though, is that
BMW attempts to trim 100 million euros ($135 million) from its German labor costs each year; a solution hinted at a few weeks ago by Germany newspaper
Muenchner Merkur. While a dramatic cost reduction, 100 million euros still doesn't begin to even approach the savings envisioned by Reithofer.
Meanwhile, the company is aiming too increase its global annual sales from 2 million units to 2.5 million by 2016, as part of its ongoing battles with
Mercedes-Benz and
Audi. Part of that plan will involve
increasing production in the US, China and Latin America.
BMW looking to save billions with cost cuts originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 18 Jun 2014 16:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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