• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Ford Europe upholds higher profit forecast: report

FRANKFURT
Sat Aug 25, 2007 10:59am EDT

Stocks

   
Ford's new Mondeo is on display during the first media day of the 77th Geneva car show at the Palexpo in Geneva March 6, 2007. Ford Motor Co.'s European division is sticking to forecasts of higher 2007 profits although it is worried about Japanese competition due to the weak yen, Chief Executive Lewis Booth was quoted on Saturday as saying. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Ford Motor Co.'s (F.N) European division is sticking to forecasts of higher 2007 profits although it is worried about Japanese competition due to the weak yen, Chief Executive Lewis Booth was quoted on Saturday as saying.

"We want to be more profitable than last year," Booth said, according to a summary of an article due to appear in Germany's Automobilwoche magazine on August 27.

Japanese carmakers were exploiting their currency's weakness against the euro and this was making the higher profit expectations especially challenging, Booth said.

Ford of Europe posted a 2006 pre-tax profit of $469 million excluding special items, an improvement of $396 million from a year earlier and its third consecutive year of profit. The unit contributed around 30 percent of Ford's worldwide group sales.

In July, it had a share of 8.2 percent in the European car market, according to the report on Saturday.

Ford was pinning great hopes on the success of new products such as the Kuga SUV and Verve, a small car, Lewis said.

Its European plants were working flat out which was one reason why he hoped that his firm would win a tender to acquire a majority stake in Romanian carmaker Automobile Craiova AUCSxm.BRQ in September, he said.



More from Reuters

Photo

Senate on verge of passing healthcare bill

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senate Democrats cleared the last 60-vote hurdle on President Barack Obama's healthcare overhaul on Wednesday, virtually ensuring final passage of its version of the biggest health policy changes in four decades.

An Iranian woman supporting former prime Mmnister Mirhossein Mousavi, who is a candidate for the upcoming presidential elections, covers her face with his picture during a pre-election gathering at a stadium in Tehran June 9, 2009. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj

A nation on the brink?

Nukes may not be the only ticking clock in Iran. The reformist movement is swelling and "it is going to get very violent."  Full Article 

A security guard walks past cars in a Geely Automobile Holdings Ltd. factory in a Shanghai suburb September 28, 2006.REUTERS/Aly Song

China in auto power play

It might not shake up the industry just yet, but China's interest in Volvo and Saab is the start of something big in global autos.  Commentary | Video