Volvo Group, the world's second-biggest truck maker, on Friday reported a seven-fold increase in net profit, thanks mostly to a massive cost-cutting drive.
Net profit for 2015 came in at 15.06 billion kronor (1.6 billion euros, $1.8 billion), after a figure of 2.2 billion in 2014.
The profit margin of the truck maker, second in the world only to Germany's Daimler, rose to more than eight percent from three percent the previous year.
"This was thanks to cost reductions, but was also helped by positive currency development and capital gains from selling shares," chief executive Martin Lundstedt said in a statement.
Fourth-quarter operating income, at 5.4 billion kronor, however came in below expectations by analysts polled by Swedish financial agency Direkt.
In 2015, demand in the truck market improved in Europe but declined from high levels in North America, Lundstedt said.
This, coupled with weakness in the Brazilian market, was going to prompt production cuts, he said.
Volvo is at the end of a three-year restructuring programme which it said has reduced overheads by 10 billion kronor annually.
The company cut 5,000 jobs last year, and the payroll now stands at 99,500.
Sales rose nine percent in 2015 partly thanks to weakness in the Swedish currency, which gave the headline a boost once income from other currencies was converted into kronor. Stripping out the currency windfall, sales were up two percent.
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