Battery cells with the logo of LG Energy Solution are displayed at the company headquarters in Seoul, South Korea, April 23, 2024. REUTERS
SEOUL, April 7 (Reuters) – South Korean battery maker LG Energy Solution (LGES) said on Tuesday it expects to post a first-quarter operating loss of 208 billion ​won ($138.16 million), as weaker demand from electric vehicles (EVs) makers weighed ‌on earnings.
That compared with an LSEG SmartEstimate forecast of a 160 billion won loss, which was weighted toward analysts who are more consistently accurate. Here are some ​details:
  • LGES, which supplies Tesla  General Motors and Hyundai Motor ​among others, has been grappling with weaker EV battery ⁠demand, with one of its major customers GM idling a Detroit ​EV plant until April.
  • Revenue would likely fall 2.5% to 6.6 trillion won from ​a year earlier, LGES said.
  • The quarterly earnings guidance includes tax credits provided under the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act for the company’s battery production in the ​United States, LGES said in a regulatory filing. Excluding the ​credits, LGES would have posted an operating loss of 398 billion won.
  • To offset weakness ‌in ⁠EV batteries, LGES is focusing on growing demand for energy storage systems (ESS), driven by rising electricity needs for AI data centres.
  • In February, LGES said it aims to triple its ESS revenue ​this year from ​a year earlier. ⁠Nomura estimated the company’s ESS revenue at about 2.8 trillion won in 2025.
  • Analysts also said a ​U.S. House bill, the CHARGE Act,  introduced last month ​to ⁠ban imports of certain Chinese-made energy storage systems, could create opportunities for South Korean battery makers. The bill cite concerns that energy ⁠storage ​systems manufactured in China and imported to ​the United States may include remote monitoring capabilities.
  • LGES is set to report details ​earnings on April 30.

Reporting by Heekyong Yang Editing by Ed Davies