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Volvo looks to make savings as rising costs hit profits

Sweden's Volvo Cars on Thursday reported a drop in its first-quarter profits, even as its revenue grew, with the automaker saying it was looking for areas to cut costs.

Volvo looks to make savings as rising costs hit profits
A Volvo XC60 B5 AWD R-design goes for a test drive. Photo: Pontus Lundahl/TT

Like other automakers, Volvo Cars has faced supply chain problems and higher costs amid soaring inflation.

The Swedish carmaker, majority-owned by China’s Geely, reported a 10-percent increase in sold cars to some 162,900 cars, and a 29-percent increase in revenue to 95.7 billion kronor ($9.3 billion).

Despite this, the company’s net profit fell to 3.98 billion kronor, compared to 4.5 billion a year earlier.

The company said its efforts to reduce costs had started to materialise in certain areas but said it might have to look to further cut expenditure.

“Given the long-term nature of the headwinds our industry is likely to face, we are also evaluating the need for further targeted cost actions that are sustainable over time and that will contribute to our growth,” CEO Jim Rowan said in a statement.

Electric cars accounted for nearly one in five cars sold in the first quarter, according to Volvo, more than double the sales of the same period a year earlier.

“We remain resolute on our journey towards becoming a fully electric carmaker by the end of the decade,” Rowan added.

At the same time, electric vehicles was a sector that also saw higher production costs, with the automaker noting that the “costs for lithium have skyrocketed 800 percent over the last two years”.

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Why North Korean hackers could leave Sweden short of alcohol this weekend

If you're thinking of quitting the booze, now may be a good time, as Sweden may run low on alcohol in just a few days.

Why North Korean hackers could leave Sweden short of alcohol this weekend

The reason? Problems down the distribution chain, as a result of a ransomware attack by a North Korean hacker group on Skanlog, a logistics firm that delivers to Sweden’s state-run alcohol monopoly Systembolaget, reports business site Dagens Industri.

Systembolaget confirmed to The Local that this may have a knock-on effect on supplies.

“This is one of our distributors, they deliver up to 25 percent of the alcohol. But we do have other suppliers as well, we have to scale up the deliveries. So I cannot say exactly what the shortage will look like in the stores,” Systembolaget press officer Sofia Sjöman Waas said.

Not only the weekend is coming up, but also Walpurgis Night on April 30th, a popular party day in university towns.

“It is too early to say what will happen. Small stores around the country have one delivery once a week and this might not affect you at all. Other stores have deliveries every day,” Sjöman Waas told The Local.

It’s unlikely that shelves will run completely dry, but some products – mostly wine, but also beer and liquor – may be out of stock.

“But in general our consumers don’t buy a lot. They come in, they buy a couple of bottles, and they consume it within a couple of days or a week,” said Sjöman Waas.

Article by Emma Löfgren and Gearóid Ó Droighneáin

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