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Profits jump for Swedish truckmaker Scania

Swedish truckmaker Scania posted a sharp rise in third-quarter net profit on Monday but sales fell short of expectations because of slow recovery in Europe from 2009, a disastrous year for the industry.

Profits jump for Swedish truckmaker Scania

“Demand in markets outside Europe is generally at a good level … Demand throughout Europe, including Russia, improved during the period from a very low level last year,” chief executive Leif Östling said in the earnings report.

Scania however noted the recovery in Europe was “nevertheless occurring slowly.”

The truckmaker’s net profit for the third quarter was up to 2.31 billion kronor ($352.7 million) against 278 million kronor for the same period a year earlier.

Sales jumped 38 percent to 18.56 billion kronor and orders were up 45 percent to 15.424 units.

The sales results missed the expectations of analysts surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires, who forecasted a jump of 48 percent to 19.86 billion, but the company’s net profit beat analysts’ estimate of 2.10 billion.

The truckmaking industry — very sensitive to the health of the economy — suffered immensely from the global economic slowdown but is recovering, with companies re-hiring laid off workers and picking up the production pace.

Scania said on Monday it had hired more than 1,000 workers in Europe during the second and third quarters and the company, which slimmed its work week to four days during the crisis, noted it had returned to the five day work week in the second quarter.

The Swedish company registers 80 percent of its sales in South America and Europe, and has a plant in Brazil. Trucks represent two thirds of its sales, with busses and engines, among other things, accounting for the rest.

Last week Volvo Group, another Swedish truckmaker which is the global number two behind Germany’s Daimler, beat results expectations, quoting the global economic recovery.

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TRUCK

Sticky situation on Danish island after sugar truck topples

A transport carrying a sweet load caused traffic problems on Danish island Møn after falling onto its side.

Sticky situation on Danish island after sugar truck topples
Photo: Depositphotos

The truck swerved sharply to avoid an animal and subsequently overturned, spilling its sugary cargo across the road.

Monday morning commuters in and out of Stege, the rural island’s largest town, were forced to find alternative routes.

It is not known whether the truck was carrying Christmas treats.

But the spillage block the entire roadway between between Stege and Queen Alexandrine Bridge, which connects Møn to Zealand.

The clean-up was expected to be completed during the morning, South Zealand and Lolland-Falster Police tweeted.

Police were alerted to the accident at 1:31am on Monday.

“The driver told me he was trying to avoid an animal. Probably a deer or something else wild. The truck then skidded, causing the trailer to overturn. The truck itself did not overturn, but ended up on the verge of the road,” police duty officer Ole Hald said.

The driver was unhurt in the incident.

“But he is naturally a bit shaken up,” Hald said

The overturned trailer was packed with sugar, complicating the clean-up.

“We need special vehicles down there to suck the sugar out of the tanker and take it away. After that, we can begin to pull the trailer upright,” Hald said.

“It is both time and resource-consuming, so we don’t expect to be ale to open the road until (later) this morning,” he added.

Stege is the largest town on Møn and has a population of around 4,000.

READ ALSO: Ten of Denmark's most 'Instagram-able' places

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