Ferrari said its adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation would grow this year to more than €1.73bn , vs an already improved forecast of €1.70bn to €1.73bn But the company added margin on adjusted EBITDA was now seen at about 35% for this year, vs a previous guidance of more than 35%.
Milan-listed shares in the company fell as much as 3.5% after results were released. By 1345 GMT they were down 2.4%. “We continue to manage an outstanding order book: with the exception of few models, our entire range is sold out,” Ferrari CEO Benedetto Vigna said.