Mercedes-Benz said yesterday its operating profits had risen slightly in the first three months of the year, as it was able to shake off the impact of high inflation.
Higher price tags for the group’s vehicles were able to “overcompensate for the negative effects from higher material costs”, amid soaring inflation, Mercedes’s finance chief Harald Wilhelm said in a statement.
Mercedes also saw “solid growth rates” in sales of both electric vehicles and its high-margin top-end vehicle range, the group said.
Sales of battery-powered vehicles had “almost doubled” in the first quarter to 51,600 units, representing 10 per cent of the group’s overall sales, Mercedes said in a statement earlier this month.
The strong performance was driven by a 327-per cent increase in electric vehicle sales in the United States, where the government has launched a push to get consumers to buy more battery-powered cars.
Meanwhile, sales of Mercedes’s top-end vehicles rose by 18 per cent year-on-year in the first quarter, with 91,800 units delivered.
The improved performance comes as supply chain issues which have dogged the auto industry appeared to be letting up somewhat.
Mercedes-Benz full first-quarter results will be published on April 28. ― AFP