Wartsila forecasts Q4 surge in demand, shares jump

Oct 26 (Reuters) – Finnish engineering group Wartsila (WRT1V.HE) forecast a surge in demand for its products in the final three months of the year, sending its shares sharply higher, as its CEO said prospects were strongest for its marine business.

The ship technology and power-plant maker struggled with slumping orders, especially from the marine sector, in 2020 after curbs linked to COVID-19 restrictions caused Royal Caribbean (RCL.N), Carnival (CCL.N) and other cruise lines to suspend their activities.

Though market conditions started to improve as restrictions were eased, postponements in power plant investments meant Wartsila faced continued headwinds during the first half of 2021.

“While market conditions remain uncertain, we expect the demand environment for our offering in the fourth quarter to be considerably better than that of the corresponding period in the previous year,” Chief Executive Hakan Agnevall said in a statement.

He later described customers in the cruise segment as “cautiously optimistic”. “They continue to ramp up,” he told Reuters.

On the energy side, the recovery would take longer.

“Many of our core markets are in the emerging countries which have been severely hit by COVID-19 and vaccination programs take a longer time. That affects both the decision-making process and also execution,” Agnevall said.

Wartsila said third-quarter comparable operating profit was up 43% year on year at 87 million euros ($101 million) as sales volumes rose.

Orders rose 21%, driven largely by a rebound in the shipping segment.

“The margin in energy was surprisingly good and the company also painted quite a shiny picture of the fourth quarter demand outlook”, Inderes analyst Erkki Vesola said.

At 1027 GMT, Wartsila shares were up 8.9% at 11.60 euros, taking gains for the year to date to 42%.

($1 = 0.8593 euros)

Reporting by Boleslaw Lasocki; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and Jan Harvey

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

source: reuters.com