
BMW’s Sudden Profit Warning Shatters Munich’s Long-Held Optimism
A sharp guidance cut from the newly installed chief executive exposes the German luxury carmaker to the same China-driven downturn and geopolitical headwinds battering its European rivals.
The last pillar of European automotive resilience has cracked. Barely four weeks after Oliver Zipse bowed out as BMW’s chief executive with a characteristically bullish declaration — “confidence is not a mood, it is an active decision” — his successor Milan Nedeljković has slashed the Munich-based group’s profit outlook, sending shares tumbling to their lowest level since November 2020. In a terse after-market statement on Tuesday, the company abandoned its previous forecast of a moderate decline in pre-tax earnings, warning instead of a “significant” drop and compressing the expected operating margin for its core automotive division from 4–6 per cent to just 1–3 per cent. The admission, which triggered a roughly 7 per cent intraday fall in the stock, marks an abrupt end to BMW’s carefully cultivated image as the German premium manufacturer best insulated from the sector’s gathering storm.
Viewed from Munich, the reversal is a belated reckoning with forces that have already savaged mass-market competitors. For years, Zipse championed a dual-track strategy of combustion engines and electric vehicles, resisting the all-in battery bets that left some rivals exposed. The Neue Klasse electric saloon was paraded at no fewer than seven launch events, a display of swagger that now looks premature. The immediate triggers are twofold: a prolonged slump in Chinese demand, where local manufacturers are seizing market share and consumer spending is faltering, and the economic shockwaves of the war in Iran, which have driven up energy costs and soured sentiment worldwide. As analysts in London and Frankfurt note, the scale of the revision — far steeper than consensus expectations — suggests the company is bracing for a structural rather than cyclical squeeze.
From Beijing to Stockholm, the ripple effects are already visible. China, the world’s largest automotive market, has long been the profit engine for Germany’s premium trio, but it is now an uninsurable risk. BMW acknowledged that positive sales momentum in Europe and the United States cannot offset the Asian downturn. On the Stockholm exchange, Volvo Cars fell 3.7 per cent in sympathy, while across the Atlantic, market watchers interpreted the warning as a potential harbinger of capacity cuts on the European continent. Deutsche Bank and Jefferies analysts described the downgrade as a signal that a broader strategic overhaul — possibly including plant closures — may be unavoidable.
For a company that once boasted of turning external crises into progress, the new tone is one of austerity. Nedeljković, just a month into the role, has already pivoted to a cost-cutting course, though details remain scant. The episode underscores a painful truth for the entire German auto establishment: the era when premium brands could rely on Chinese margins to subsidise technological transitions elsewhere is fading. With tariff pressures mounting and the Middle East conflict injecting fresh uncertainty into energy markets, the industry’s centre of gravity is shifting in ways that even the most self-assured boardrooms can no longer ignore.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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BMW's long-cultivated illusion of immunity to the auto crisis has shattered. The new CEO, barely weeks into the job, slashed profit forecasts, exposing the hubris of the previous leadership. The party is over in Munich as China's slowdown and geopolitical shocks finally hit home.
The German giant that quit the Russian market is now watching its shares collapse to multi-year lows. BMW blames China and the war with Iran, but the narrative carries a note of vindication for its exit from Moscow. The once-proud Bavarian automaker is forced to confront a harsh reality.
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