Bentley charging out of the wilderness into profitability |
VW allow us to see how each division fares when it comes to profit various brands make within the group. I believe the figures exclude vehicles made by joint venture operations in China. Lamborghini is combined with Audi. The first column is sales (Bentley the only one with a decimal place due to small numbers). Then millions of euros profit/loss and finally euros of profit per vehicle made.
Porsche is very profitable, at over €15,000 per vehicle. Bentley had a horror 2018 but bounced back strongly in 2019. I think VW would like to see the €5,600 per car improved on though. Audi/Lamborghini gained a bit, to €3,750 each and Škoda pushed its margin up to €1,560.
VW LCVs were down to €1,100, the tie up with Ford LCVs in Europe a good move. VW cars is trying to lift its modest €1,000 per unit figure, with a little success. Lastly SEAT was a constant loss maker that tested VW HQ's patience. However, it is now in the black and gaining, now at €670. Is it a coincidence the profit came along at the same time as it invested in an SUV range? I think not.
Year | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | ||||||
Brand | Sales | Mill € | € Per Car | Sales | Mill € | € Per Car | Sales | Mill € | € Per Car |
Porsche | 277 | 4,210 | 15,199 | 253 | 4,110 | 16,245 | 248 | 4,003 | 16,141 |
Bentley | 11.6 | 65 | 5,603 | 9.6 | -288 | -30,000 | 10.5 | 55 | 5,238 |
Audi | 1,200 | 4,509 | 3,758 | 1,467 | 4,705 | 3,207 | 1,530 | 5,058 | 3,306 |
Škoda | 1,062 | 1,660 | 1,563 | 957 | 1,377 | 1,439 | 937 | 1,611 | 1,719 |
VW LCV | 456 | 510 | 1,118 | 469 | 780 | 1,663 | 498 | 853 | 1,713 |
VW Car | 3,677 | 3,787 | 1,030 | 3,715 | 3,239 | 872 | 3,573 | 3,301 | 924 |
SEAT | 667 | 445 | 667 | 608 | 254 | 418 | 595 | 191 | 321 |
Data source: VW.