Daimler says all costs under scrutiny after moderate start to 2019

Reuters  |  Author 

Published May 22, 2019 06:06AM ET

Daimler says all costs under scrutiny after moderate start to 2019

BERLIN (Reuters) - Daimler's outgoing chief executive said on Wednesday that all of the luxury carmaker's costs were under review as he expressed dissatisfaction with the group's profitability as it invests heavily in electric cars.

"Everything is under scrutiny: fixed and variable costs, material and personnel costs, investment projects, vertical integration and the product range," Dieter Zetsche said in a statement https:// ahead of Daimler's annual general meeting in Berlin.

"Along with external factors, we are now also feeling the financial effects of the company's transformation," said Zetsche, who is set to hand control to 49-year-old Swede Ola Kaellenius on Wednesday.

Kaellenius said earlier this month that Daimler will cut development costs for new Mercedes-Benz cars by a significant amount by 2025 and will intensify alliances with rivals as a way to improve margins.

Kaellenius is working out details of the cost savings program.

Daimler is pushing to develop a raft of electric and hybrid cars so it can boast a carbon neutral car fleet by 2039.

The Stuttgart-based group said on Wednesday that it was aiming to limit the price of new car technologies for customers.

"To do so, we have to cut costs and increase efficiency throughout the company," Zetsche said.

He said Daimler, which confirmed its full-year targets, had a moderate start to the year.

"This was expected, but it doesn't make it any better. In particular, we cannot and will not be satisfied with the current level of profitability."

Zetsche, an engineer nicknamed "Dr. Z" who joined the company in 1976, is due to become chairman of the supervisory board in 2021, following a standard two-year cooling off period.

Daimler's shareholders are also set to approve a new corporate structure to combine the car and van businesses as well as the truck and bus businesses in two independent entities.

The new corporate structure would allow the carmaker greater flexibility to list individual divisions.