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2008Strong Performance Continues at CLAAS
Financial press conference 2008 (from the left): Thomas Klatt, Dr. Hermann Garbers, Dr. Theo Freye, Ulrlich Jochem, Lothar Kriszun, Jan-Hendrik Mohr and Dr. Rolf Meuther. CLAAS in a leading position With sales exceeding €3.2 billion and pre-tax earnings totaling €248 million, the CLAAS Group presented its best results to date in fiscal year 2007/2008. Sales grew by a total of 21.7%. For the agricultural engineering market alone, the figure was 22.8%. This documents the strong growth in sales in CLAAS's core business, agricultural technology, where the company specializes in combine harvesters, foragers, tractors, and green harvest machinery. The CLAAS Production Engineering and CLAAS Industrial Engineering segments also improved their external sales, reporting increases of 7.9% to €161.3 million and 4.1% to €42.8 million respectively. Proportion of export sales rises Business in North America exhibited positive signs as well, supported by a good harvest and strong demand for bioethanol. In the South American market, the recovery phase that started in 2007 continued. The Indian market was stable. The increasing migration of workers from farming to industry has accelerated the process of mechanization in agriculture. Consequently, CLAAS is reinforcing its presence in this promising market. In the middle of the year, the company opened another production facility for rice combines in Chandigarh, Punjab.
R&D expenditures continue to rise
Outlook Global grain consumption reached record highs again in 2008. While grain production was able to keep up the pace, global supply levels are still relatively low. As a consequence, grain prices were once again higher than the multi-year average in 2008. The consumption of grain will continue to rise as the population continues to grow and eating habits change. Claas therefore expects the favorable income situation in farming to continue even though grain prices have dropped significantly in the meantime. A potential worldwide recession would have an adverse impact on this fundamentally positive trend. However, due to the global trends described above, Claas believes that investment incentives for buyers of agricultural machinery will remain strong in the future. This is why we currently expect business to remain balanced on the whole although it will fluctuate in individual markets. Claas anticipates stable sales and earnings trends for fiscal year 2009 overall.
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