Volvo Cars is
adjusting the financial assumptions for the EX90 and ES90 platform, due to
previous launch delays and new import tariffs in several markets.
The Volvo EX90 will have a reduced lifecycle profitability, despite a major
upgrade of software quality and a planned volume ramp-up. This is due to
significant launch delays in the past and subsequent additional development
costs.
Meanwhile, due to import tariffs the company is currently unable to sell the
Volvo ES90 profitably in the United States, while ES90 margins are also under
pressure in Europe for the same reason.
In light of the above, Volvo Cars today announces that it will record a one-off
non-cash impairment charge of SEK 11.4 billion in the second quarter of 2025.
Volvo Cars continues to invest in its next-generation dedicated electric car
architecture and software capabilities. These will underpin several upcoming
high-volume programmes, including the all-electric Volvo EX60 which is on track
and will be launched and start production in 2026.
“Given market developments such as import tariffs in the US, development and
launch delays for the EX90 and strategic investment prioritisations, we have
reassessed volume assumptions for these two cars. This has resulted in a lower
than planned lifecycle profitability,” said Fredrik Hansson, CFO at
Volvo Cars.
The charge primarily reflects adjustments in expected volumes and planned
lifecycle profitability associated with the platform for the EX90 and ES90
cars, rightsizing the assets to the known market realities. SEK 4.0 billion of
the charge is estimated to impact cost of sales and the majority of the
remaining amount affects the R&D line in the financial reporting.
The effect on group net income will be SEK 9.0 billion and will be reported in
Volvo Cars Q2 results, scheduled to be disclosed on 17 July 2025.
“The development of the EX90 and ES90 has laid a critical technological
foundation for our future, with the Volvo Cars Superset tech stack,” Fredrik
Hansson continues. “The learnings and core systems we developed,
including core computing and electric drivelines, will be used in
next-generation platforms. These innovations are key to realising our long-term
electrification and software-defined vehicle strategy, putting Volvo Cars at
the technological forefront of the auto industry.”
The upcoming EX60, built on the company’s next generation architecture, will
deliver significant cost reductions and performance improvements. This is
thanks to, among other things, the introduction of mega-casting of car parts,
cell-to-body technology that integrates batteries in the car body and the next
generation of in-house developed e-motors.
This disclosure contains information that Volvo Car AB (publ) is obliged to
make public pursuant to the EU Market Abuse Regulation (EU nr 596/2014). The
information was submitted for publication, through the agency of the contact
person, on 14-07-2025 16:58 CET.
Fr:
Source: Volvo Cars.
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