By Esha Vaish
STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Volvo plans to cut fixed costs by 2 billion Swedish crowns ($214 million), it said on Thursday, becoming the latest carmaker to warn that pricing pressure and tariffs arising from the China-U.S. trade war were denting profitability.
Carmakers are under pressure from trade conflicts, hefty investments to develop electric and driverless cars and an overall downturn in the car industry, with warnings seen from Daimler
Volvo has rejigged its global production plans in an effort to reduce the impact of tariffs and has begun a review of costs, which CEO Hakan Samuelsson told Reuters had led to hourly wage cuts and the elimination of 750 roles, mainly consultants.
He said this would lead to 1 billion crowns in savings from July, with the remainder of its promised savings expected to come from measures to be completed by the first half of 2020.
Second-quarter operating profit fell 38.1% to 2.6 billion, a worse quarter-on-quarter drop than first quarter.
Volvo said market conditions were expected to continue pressuring margins but it expected volume growth and cost measures to result in a "strengthened" second half compared to the final half of last year.
Volkswagen
He also said Volvo and Chinese parent Geely [GEELY.UL] were no longer seeking funds for electric brand Polestar.
"We have the financing required to push through Polestar cars in the pipeline... so (external financing) is not something that is on our radar right now."
TARGET DENIED
Lower profits complicate the picture for the rollout of driverless cars, with carmakers slowing deployment to well beyond 2025 as delivery of such vehicles proves more expensive than expected and technological limitations raise safety concerns.
Volvo's robotaxi project with Uber
Through its Veoneer
"Volvo will have a highway autopilot and it will be safe and it will be able to handle all situations when it's engaged. Exactly how often you can engage it and at what speeds will be revealed later on," Samuelsson said.
Volvo also has a deal with Chinese firm Huawei, which is still under partial U.S. sanctions.
Samuelsson said the actions against Huawei would have no impact on Volvo, which is using Huawei's app store in China, while relying on Google
"We have a cooperation with Huawei, but it's not really about technology's access to their apps so we don't see any influence," he said.
(Reporting by Esha Vaish in Stockholm; editing by Jane Merriman and Jason Neely)