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Ferrari's Profit Rose 8%, but Sales Growth Slowed

Italian supercar manufacturer Ferrari (NYSE: RACE) said that its adjusted operating profit rose 10% from a year ago to 239 million euros ($264 million), on an 8% increase in global shipments driven primarily by demand for eight-cylinder models.

Ferrari also confirmed most of its previous guidance for the full year, raising only its cash-flow expectation. But some analysts had expected a more dramatic upgrade to guidance, and shares fell in early trading after the news was released.

A silver Ferrari Portofino, a sleek front-engined convertible sports car, parked on a beach.
A silver Ferrari Portofino, a sleek front-engined convertible sports car, parked on a beach.

Worldwide demand for Ferrari's V-8-powered Portofino convertible remained high in the second quarter. Image source: Ferrari.

The raw numbers

Ferrari had no special items in the most recent quarter, but in the second quarter of 2018, it took a one-time credit of 1 million euros related to a prior charge for expenses from the 2016 Takata airbag recall.

Metric

Q2 2019

Change vs. Q2 2018

Revenue

984 million euros

9%

Vehicle shipments

2,671

8%

Adjusted earnings before interest and tax (EBIT)

239 million euros

10%

Adjusted EBIT margin

24.3%

0.4 pp higher

Net profit

184 million euros

14%

Industrial free cash flow

139 million euros

78.2%

Data source: Ferrari; pp = percentage points. As of Aug. 2, 1 euro = $1.10. Adjusted figures exclude special items. Industrial free cash flow is from Ferrari's core automaking business and excludes its financial-services unit.

What happened at Ferrari in the second quarter

  • Sales growth slowed from the first quarter, when shipments increased by 23% year over year. Second-quarter shipments increased by 208 units (8.4%) from the year-ago period, driven by an 12.3% increase in V-8 powered models, primarily the Portofino convertible. Shipments of V-12 models, which generally carry higher profit margins, fell slightly from a year ago.

  • Ferrari is seeing particularly high demand for the V-8 Portofino and the V-12 812 Superfast models.

  • Deliveries of V-8 488-series models slipped in the second quarter. The 488 is nearing the end of its run; the company has already shown its successor, the F8 Tributo.

  • Deliveries to Mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan rose 63% from a year ago; deliveries to North and South America fell 6%, and deliveries to Europe rose 11%.

  • The increase in China was the result of a decision to try to deliver as many vehicles as possible ahead of upcoming new emissions regulations in the country. Shipments to the U.S. fell because of lower demand for the outgoing 488 series.

  • In May, Ferrari introduced a new hybrid, the SF90 Stradale. It pairs a V-8 with a race-derived all-wheel battery-electric-hybrid system to deliver what Ferrari calls "unprecedented" performance. It will sit at the top of the regular model range, above the 812 Superfast.

Looking ahead

Ferrari maintained most of the full-year guidance it gave in January. It increased its target for industrial free cash flow, and said that, assuming interest rates remain constant, it currently expects results to approach "the high end of the range on all metrics."

Metric

2019 Guidance

2018 Actual

Revenue

More than 3.5 billion euros

3.4 billion euros

Adjusted EBITDA

Between 1.2 billion and 1.25 billion euros

1.1 billion euros

Adjusted EBITDA margin

Around 34%

32.6%

Adjusted EBIT

Between 850 million and 900 million euros

825 million euros

Adjusted EBIT margin

Around 24.5%

24.1%

Adjusted earnings per share

Between 3.50 and 3.70 euros

3.40 euros

Industrial free cash flow

Greater than 550 million euros. (Previous guidance: around 450 million euros)

400 million euros

Data source: Ferrari.

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John Rosevear has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

This article was originally published on Fool.com