The return of the iconic Renault 5 as an electric car is bringing customers into dealerships and having a 'halo effect' on sales of other models, the company says
The return of the iconic Renault 5 as an electric car is bringing customers into dealerships and having a 'halo effect' on sales of other models, the company says AFP

Renault confirmed on Thursday it defied headwinds in the car industry by boosting revenue and attaining record profitability in 2024 thanks to the success of its new line up of vehicles, although net profit sank as it scaled back its partnership with Nissan.

The group, which also includes the budget Dacia brand and sportscar Alpine, saw revenues rising by 7.4 percent to hit 56.2 billion euros ($58.6 billion), with its operating profit margin coming in at a record 7.6 percent.

However net profit sank to 800 million euros due to a 1.5-billion-euro loss it booked on the sale of Nissan shares.

Without the sale of Nissan shares, profit would have come in at 2.8 billion euros, a 21 percent increase on 2023.

"This excellent performance is the result of our product offensive and cost cutting," chief financial officer Thierry Pieton told journalists.

"Renault Group has never been so strong and benefited from such solid fundamentals," he added.

Chief executive Luca de Meo praised the "in-depth transformation of the company".

The board proposed a dividend payment of 2.20 euros per share, an increase of 19 percent from last year.

The company's shares slid 1.5 percent in morning trading on the Paris stock exchange.

Renault's new line up of vehicles -- it launched 10 models in 2024 -- accounted for 24 percent of sales in the final quarter of 2024, which is a good indication for the start of 2025, said Pieton.

The company's new compact Renault 5 electric car has booked orders at a higher rate than expected in Europe, where it is available.

Pieton said the Renault 5, which harks back to a popular model from the 1970s through 1990s, was bringing clients into dealerships and had a "halo effect" on sales of other models.

Electric models still represent only nine percent of Renault's sales in Europe, however, where hybrids are currently the favourite of consumers.

De Meo announced Dacia will launch a small electric car manufactured in Europe which will retail for under 18,000 euros before incentives.

The carmaker enjoyed a certain success with its budget subcompact electric car Spring, but the fact that it is manufactured in China means it is subject to European import tariffs, harming its competitiveness on the market.

Renault has big hopes its subcompact Twingo to hit the market this year to help make the price of electric cars more affordable.

The car, designed in China but assembled in Slovenia, is part of Renault's efforts to speed the development time of vehicles to less than two years.

Pieton said Renault wasn't keen in joining up with other carmakers to meet the emissions requirements and expressed the hope they would be relaxed.

Tighter emissions regulations this year could cost the company about one percentage point of revenue in 2025, around 550 million euros, it estimates, as it cuts prices on electric models to meet sales targets.

Dacia will get a European-manufactured successor to the Chinese-made Spring
Dacia will get a European-manufactured successor to the Chinese-made Spring AFP