Peter Warren Cuts FY26 Profit Forecast to $12M–$15M as New Car Margins Crumble
Peter Warren flags sharp FY26 earnings downgrade as margin pressures and shifting demand bite
Peter Warren Automotive Holdings (ASX: PWR) has issued a trading update on 1 June 2026, warning that underlying profit before tax (PBT) for FY26 is now expected to land in the range of $12 million to $15 million. The company describes this as a “substantial reduction” following solid first half growth, with the primary driver being intense pressure on new car trading margins.
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What’s driving the downturn — and what Peter Warren is doing about it
Three external forces squeezing new car margins
Management has identified three external pressures behind the deterioration in trading conditions:
- Rapid demand shifts: War in the Middle East is driving fuel prices higher, while three RBA interest rate rises and associated cost of living pressures are pushing new car buyers toward smaller, more fuel-efficient vehicles. Fewer high-margin models are being purchased with accessories, directly compressing margins.
- Intensifying competition: New market entrants are competing with existing brands for share in the Australian market, placing further downward pressure on new car margins across the industry.
- Supply chain disruption: The rapid change in customer demand is affecting vehicle availability and year-end deliveries of certain high-demand models. Order banks have increased substantially as a result.
Record results in used cars, service and parts offer a partial offset
Not all parts of the business are under pressure. Peter Warren’s used vehicle and aftersales operations are tracking ahead of prior years, providing meaningful resilience against the new car margin headwinds.
- Service and parts revenue is on track to deliver a record result in FY26
- Used car results are also on track for a record in FY26
To mitigate the external pressures and build momentum heading into FY27, management has outlined the following actions:
- Continued optimisation of brands within the existing property footprint to meet evolving customer preferences, including expanding the portfolio of NEV brands
- Growing service and parts revenue across the network
- Accelerating used car performance
- Implementing cost-management initiatives, including leveraging the company’s scale and property footprint despite persistent high inflation
Understanding profit before tax (PBT) guidance — what this means for investors
Underlying profit before tax (PBT) represents what the business earns before income tax is applied, adjusted to strip out one-off or non-recurring items. It is one of the clearest indicators of a company’s core operating performance for a given period.
A mid-year trading update like this one matters because it gives investors advance notice that full-year results will fall short of earlier expectations, before the financial year formally closes on 30 June 2026.
The timing is particularly significant here. As the announcement notes, May and June typically represent a large proportion of the Company’s annual result. With the outlook for both months described as subdued, the guidance range of $12 million to $15 million reflects a view that the remainder of FY26 is unlikely to compensate for the margin compression already experienced. For retail investors, this guidance range signals where management believes the business will land, and it sets the baseline against which the full-year result will be measured.
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CEO perspective and the path into FY27
Doyle on market conditions and order bank strength
Andrew Doyle, CEO of Peter Warren, acknowledged the severity of recent conditions while pointing to forward-looking indicators that he believes position the company well for the year ahead.
Andrew Doyle, CEO
“Trading conditions in recent weeks have been unprecedented. Customer preferences are changing rapidly, accelerated by increased fuel prices and cost of living pressures. When coupled with some uncertainty in vehicle supply chains, we will enter FY27 with a much higher order bank.”
Doyle also noted that overall order intake is up significantly, with exceptional growth in recently added Chinese brands, and that new and attractive models continue to come to market. A third statement from the CEO reinforced the company’s operational focus, with Doyle commenting that management is “focussed on strengthening revenue and cost efficiency within areas of the business that we can control,” including expanding representation of newly introduced brands and growing used vehicle, service and parts operations.
Strategic levers heading into FY27
Despite the near-term earnings pressure, management has articulated a clear set of strategic priorities intended to support a recovery into FY27.
| Strategic Focus | Current Status | FY27 Opportunity |
|---|---|---|
| NEV/Chinese brands | Portfolio expanding | Strong order intake, new models incoming |
| Used vehicles | Record FY26 result | Continued acceleration |
| Service and parts | Record FY26 result | Further revenue growth |
| Cost management | Initiatives implemented | Leverage scale and property footprint |
The substantially higher order bank entering FY27, combined with record performance in used vehicles and aftersales, suggests the underlying business retains structural strengths even as new car margins face a difficult operating environment.
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