Renault revenue falls by less than expected in first quarter

Market disrupted by semiconductor shortage and sharp decline in Russian auto sales

The company’s revenue contracted 2.7 per cent to €9.75 billion. Photograph: Loic Venance/AFP via Getty Images
The company’s revenue contracted 2.7 per cent to €9.75 billion. Photograph: Loic Venance/AFP via Getty Images

Renault SA's quarterly revenue fell by less than expected in the first quarter as the French car-maker navigated semiconductor shortages and a sharp decline in Russian auto sales due to the war in Ukraine.

Revenue contracted 2.7 per cent to €9.75 billion, the company said on Friday, beating the €9.27 billion estimate compiled by Bloomberg.

The market is “severely disrupted by the conflict in Ukraine, the semiconductor crisis and inflation”, chief financial officer Thierry Piéton said in a statement.

Renault is sticking with an estimate that chip supplies will shave production by about 300,000 this year, mainly in the first half, and said its order book is strong.

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The drop was expected after Renault’s worldwide vehicle sales volumes declined 17 per cent over the three-month period, including a 34 per cent plunge in Russia, the manufacturer’s second-biggest market, according to figures published earlier this week.

Russian war

The quarterly report reflects Renault’s souring prospects after Russian president Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine. The company’s shares have lost just more than a quarter of their value since the war began. Renault is the most exposed auto-maker to Russia through its majority-owned AvtoVaz venture, which makes the popular Lada brand.

Revenue from Russia fell 16 per cent to €900 million, with the AvtoVaz venture accounting for €527 million of the total, Renault said on Friday.

Renault last month said it intends to withdraw from Russia, but the company has yet to disclose details beyond halting an assembly plant in Moscow.

As a result, it revised downwards its financial outlook for this year both for profit margin and free cash flow, and warned that it could take a writedown in first-half earnings for the value of the business, which was €2.2 billion at the end of last year.

The company, which is working on a turnaround plan, confirmed its predictions in the statement and said it would hold a capital markets day in the fall. – Bloomberg