Renault to double electric car offerings, widen China presence

epa06197629 An electric car connects a charging pole for electric vehicles at an electric vehicle charging station outside an apartment in Beijing, China, 11 September 2017. China plans to ban cars powered by fossil fuels in the future, while promoting hybrids and electric vehicles, Vice-minister of Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) Xin Guobin said during a forum.  EPA-EFE/WU HONG

Bloomberg

Renault SA will double electric-car offerings in the next five years and widen its presence in China to protect its global ranking in building battery-powered autos as competitors including Volkswagen AG expand in the segment.
Electrified models will comprise half of Renault’s line-up by the end of 2022 as the carmaker rolls out eight new or revamped wholly battery-powered autos and adds 12 hybrid vehicles, Chief Executive Officer Carlos Ghosn said in Paris at a presentation of the new business strategy, dubbed Drive the Future.
“We intend to remain the leading provider of mass-market electric vehicles,” Ghosn said. Battery-powered autos are “turning into a significant contributor to our performance,” and “our vision is obviously now a profitable core business” with the models.
Renault and long-time Japanese partner Nissan Motor Co. are under pressure to defend an early advantage in electric cars as Tesla Inc. rolls out the lower priced Model 3 sedan and Volkswagen plans a $23.4 billion push into making electric cars for the masses. While the Renault-Nissan alliance sold the most battery-powered vehicles in the industry to date, the advantage has amounted to little amid tepid consumer demand.

40% Growth
The French company plans about 40 percent growth in annual sales and deliveries by 2022, with revenue exceeding 70 billion euros and volume totalling 5 million vehicles, as it seeks more customers in China, Brazil, Russia and Iran. Operating profit will amount to more than 7 percent of revenue as manufacturing-efficiency measures generate savings of 4.2 billion euros, and regions outside Europe will account for more earnings, according to an online presentation. The company will invest 18 billion euros in new technology, including developing 15 models with autonomous features.
Renault’s plan “relies on everything coming from emerging markets,” analysts at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., including Max Warburton, wrote in a report to clients. “Renault has a good track record in such markets and may well succeed further,” though much of the performance will hinge on the countries’ economies rather than the company’s own efforts. The stock has gained 2.8 percent this year, valuing the company at 25.7 billion euros.
The business plan “is good news in a world where most people fear earnings, cash flow and profitability will fall due to disruption” from battery-powered and driverless systems, analysts at Evercore ISI, including Arndt Ellinghorst in London, said in a report to clients.
The automaker, based in the Paris suburb of Boulogne-Billancourt, is building on a joint strategy outlined three weeks ago with Nissan and new partner Mitsubishi Motors Corp. to bring out 12 purely electric vehicles by 2022 as well as at least one fully automated model. Nissan will unveil details of its business plan on October 16, and Tokyo-based Mitsubishi Motors will release its program two days later. Ghosn is also chairman of the two Japanese manufacturers. Renault’s savings goal compares with 3.2 billion euros in spending reductions in its previous business programme, Ghosn said.
The carmaker pledged to maintain the margin at or above 5 percent during the planning period. Even so, it faces roadblocks, including price pressure in some markets as customers resist the cost of new technology.
The industry shift to battery-powered cars is being pushed by increased regulatory scrutiny following Volkswagen’s diesel-emissions scandal and government efforts to reduce air pollution by phasing out combustion engines.

epa05961101 (FILE) - A close-up of a Renault Clio on display at the showroom headquarters during the presentation of Renault's 2016 annual results, in Boulogne, near Paris, France, 17 January 2017. Renault said 13 May 2017 that it was hit by the global cyber attack. According to news reports, a 'WannaCry' ransomware cyber attack hits thousands of computers in 99 countries encrypting files from affected computer units and demanding 300 US dollars through bitcoin to decrypt the files.  EPA/CHRISTOPHE PETIT TESSON

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