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Volvo Cars’ Q1 profit falls less than expected, says the US worse than expected

By Thomson Reuters Apr 29, 2026 | 4:11 AM

(Corrects to remove Reuters instrument code for Geely Holding in paragraph 2)

By Marie Mannes

STOCKHOLM, April 29 (Reuters) – Sweden-based Volvo Cars reported on Wednesday a smaller-than-expected fall in quarterly profit as savings cushioned tough market conditions, ​but said the impact of a pull-back of subsidies and other developments ‌in the United States had been unexpectedly bad.

Shares of the company, which is majority-owned by China’s Geely Holding, were up 1% in early trading, taking a year-to-date fall to 25%.

“We are not satisfied with our results … but despite a volume drop coming from external factors we are ‌more or ​less flat in profitability … which I think is ⁠really well done internally with ⁠all the factors we can control,” CEO Hakan Samuelsson told Reuters.

Volvo Cars had warned that profit would be negatively impacted by tariff-related costs, currency effects, tough competition and geopolitical tensions.

It said second-quarter profitability would continue to face headwinds, compounded ​by the production ramp-up of its new electric EX60, which started production in its Gothenburg factory last week.

“You can of course wish for a better market ⁠from the external world but we will now ⁠just concentrate in the second half of the year to ​come back to growth,” Samuelsson said.

First-quarter operating profit was 1.6 billion crowns ($172 million) against ​a year-earlier 1.9 billion, on an 11% sales drop, with a gross ‌margin of 18.5%.

Analysts at Handelsbanken, Bernstein and JPM said the profit drop was smaller than expected, citing a consensus of 900 to 950 million crowns.

“What is sticking out that they are having cost savings of about two billion in the quarter, ⁠which is counteracting the sales drop and the negative price mix,” Handelsbanken’s Hampus Engellau said.

Volvo Cars said its cost cuts under a programme launched a year ago, and the ⁠fact it had kept ‌its market share in the premium segment in Europe, supported ⁠profits.

However, Samuelsson said that it had been more severely impacted ​in the ‌U.S. than anticipated, as a critical $7,500 tax break for ​buyers was removed, ⁠which also impacted its plug-in model line-up in addition to its EVs.

The group had earlier warned that profit would be negatively impacted by tariff-related costs, currency translation effects, tough competition and geopolitical tensions.

Volvo Cars reiterated that it aims to increase group sales volumes for the full year.

($1 = 9.2761 Swedish crowns)

(Reporting by Marie Mannes, Editing by Anna ​Ringstrom and Thomas Derpinghaus)