
Sweden's Husqvarna misses profit forecast on weak North American demand; CEO to step down
Husqvarna's earnings before interest and tax fell 21% to 1.53 billion Swedish crowns ($157.97 million), missing analysts' average forecast of 1.71 billion crowns per data compiled by LSEG.
Hajman, the garden equipment maker's CEO since May 2023, said he would step down once a permanent successor is appointed, likely by the end of this year.
Husqvarna shares dropped 7% as of 0737 GMT, and were among worst performers on the pan-European 600 index (.STOXX), opens new tab.
The first quarter is Husqvarna's main sell-in period, when products are shipped to retailers before spring, but attention is already turning to how products will sell through in the second quarter.
The company previously warned of weaker sales and operating losses in recent quarters, citing soft consumer demand, retailer destocking and a tougher product mix.
The company reported a 16% growth in first-quarter robotic mower sales, driven by professional and consumer demand in Europe, even as overall market conditions remained challenging.
However, Hajman flagged there is a risk that tariffs imposed under U.S. President Trump on European goods could lead to increased volume of Chinese-made gardening equipment in Europe as a result of sales being hindered in the U.S.
"We are implementing price increases and conducting a review of our supply chain to mitigate the effects," Huqvarna said in a statement.
Hajman told Reuters that the company was in talks with suppliers and adjusting its manufacturing footprint, such as the Orangeburg facility sale in North America.
"We are preparing ourselves by reviewing our manufacturing footprint, both for short-term actions involving specific products that can be moved to a more favorable manufacturing country from a tariff perspective," Hajman told Reuters.
Jefferies said in a note the results showed flat sales, a 19% EBIT miss and declining sales in the company's Gardena division due to continued caution among retail partners.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
31 minutes ago
- Reuters
Alibaba launches open-source AI coding model, touted as its most advanced to date
BEIJING, July 23 (Reuters) - Alibaba has launched an open-source artificial intelligence coding model, called Qwen3-Coder, it said in a statement on Wednesday. The model is designed for high-performance software development and touted as its most advanced AI coding model to date. The model excels in agentic AI coding tasks, from generating new codes and managing complex coding workflows, according to the statement.

Rhyl Journal
an hour ago
- Rhyl Journal
Crystal Palace to know European fate by August 11 after submitting appeal to CAS
The London club, who won last season's FA Cup, were demoted from the Europa League to the Conference League after falling foul of UEFA's rules governing multi-club ownership. European football's governing body determined that as of March 1, American businessman John Textor had control or influence in Palace and French club Lyon. Where one or more club are found to have shared ownership, they cannot play in the same competition, and Lyon held on to the Europa League spot by virtue of their higher league position. Palace's place in the second-tier competition was taken by Nottingham Forest. The CAS issued a statement on Tuesday confirming it had received an appeal by Palace and would render an operative decision – without written reasons – on or before August 11. A date for the hearing has not yet been scheduled, the court said. The CAS confirmed Palace were seeking to take either Forest's or Lyon's place in the Europa League. Textor has agreed to sell his stake in Palace to New York Jets owner Woody Johnson, but the move came too late to satisfy UEFA. Palace's prospects looked brighter when Lyon were relegated to France's second division by the country's football finance regulator. Lyon had reached a settlement with UEFA agreeing to be excluded from European competition if their appeal against that sanction failed, but they managed to overturn the initial decision and hold on to their top-flight place. The CAS said parties were currently exchanging written submissions. Palace fans have staged protests against the ruling, and club chairman Steve Parish told The Rest Is Football podcast last week: 'We are still fighting. There's an appeal process, so we go to CAS which is the court for arbitration and, you know, we're very hopeful. We think we've got great legal arguments. 'We don't think this is the right decision by any means. We know unequivocally that John didn't have decisive influence over the club. 'We know we proved that beyond all reasonable doubt because it's a fact.'


South Wales Guardian
an hour ago
- South Wales Guardian
Crystal Palace to know European fate by August 11 after submitting appeal to CAS
The London club, who won last season's FA Cup, were demoted from the Europa League to the Conference League after falling foul of UEFA's rules governing multi-club ownership. European football's governing body determined that as of March 1, American businessman John Textor had control or influence in Palace and French club Lyon. Where one or more club are found to have shared ownership, they cannot play in the same competition, and Lyon held on to the Europa League spot by virtue of their higher league position. Palace's place in the second-tier competition was taken by Nottingham Forest. The CAS issued a statement on Tuesday confirming it had received an appeal by Palace and would render an operative decision – without written reasons – on or before August 11. A date for the hearing has not yet been scheduled, the court said. The CAS confirmed Palace were seeking to take either Forest's or Lyon's place in the Europa League. Textor has agreed to sell his stake in Palace to New York Jets owner Woody Johnson, but the move came too late to satisfy UEFA. Palace's prospects looked brighter when Lyon were relegated to France's second division by the country's football finance regulator. Lyon had reached a settlement with UEFA agreeing to be excluded from European competition if their appeal against that sanction failed, but they managed to overturn the initial decision and hold on to their top-flight place. The CAS said parties were currently exchanging written submissions. Palace fans have staged protests against the ruling, and club chairman Steve Parish told The Rest Is Football podcast last week: 'We are still fighting. There's an appeal process, so we go to CAS which is the court for arbitration and, you know, we're very hopeful. We think we've got great legal arguments. 'We don't think this is the right decision by any means. We know unequivocally that John didn't have decisive influence over the club. 'We know we proved that beyond all reasonable doubt because it's a fact.'