Viña Santa Rita reports $5.871 million losses in 2025

Viña Santa Rita's board president, Baltazar Sánchez, presented the 2025 annual report, noting economic results well below expectations amid a global wine consumption drop and local issues. Sales fell 1.6% and the company recorded $5.871 million in losses.

Baltazar Sánchez, Viña Santa Rita's board president and a commercial engineer from Grupo Claro, outlined in the annual report published on Wednesday, March 25, in the Comisión para el Mercado Financiero the challenges faced by the company in 2025. “Despite the efforts made to reverse the company's difficult situation, the economic results were well below expectations. 2025 was, for Viña Santa Rita, a period of major challenges and contrasts,” Sánchez stated. The firm was hit by an international environment of high uncertainty and a sustained drop in global wine consumption, along with supply chain adjustments globally and nationally. Specifically, intensified competition squeezed margins, while a harvest volume reduction raised grape costs in mass and varietal segments. Total sales reached $157.009 million, down 1.6% from $159.637 million in 2024. Local market billing fell $3.157 million (-5.3%), and exports from Chile dropped $2.888 million (-4.3%), with lower volumes to Latin America, the United States, England, Japan, Germany, and China. By December 31, 2025, Viña Santa Rita and subsidiaries reported losses of $5.871 million, compared to profits of $3.030 million in 2024. Sánchez stressed that the company is reinforcing its long-term strategy, focusing on high-end segments, strategic brands, and adaptation to the competitive landscape. “Today we are fully focused on reversing the results obtained and strengthening our competitive position,” he concluded.

Awọn iroyin ti o ni ibatan

Realistic illustration depicting a Porsche sports car in a rainy lot amid financial decline charts, symbolizing the company's 91% profit drop in 2025.
Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

Porsche reports sharp profit decline in 2025

Ti AI ṣe iroyin Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

Sports car maker Porsche reported a 91.4 percent profit drop for 2025, reducing net profit to 310 million euros. Revenue fell by about ten percent to 36.3 billion euros, weighed down by strategic shifts, challenges in China, and US tariffs. New CEO Michael Leiters plans a company realignment.

Lanvin Group reported an 18% year-on-year decline in revenues to €240 million for fiscal 2025, amid macroeconomic challenges and an ongoing transformation. The company highlighted improvements in adjusted EBITDA and direct-to-consumer sales despite brand-specific declines.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Chile's seven open Isapres recorded nominal profits of $14.142 million in 2025, their best result since 2020. However, the Superintendencia de Salud warns that the operational result remains negative at -$12.445 million, though it improved 93% from 2024.

In its latest monthly update, Colombia's Banco de la República reported accumulated profits of $2.55 trillion through March 2026—a 43% drop from $4.43 trillion in March 2025. This continues a downward trend following February's 8.49% decline to $2.67 trillion (part of our ongoing Banco de la República Profits Reports series). Assets, equity, and reserves also fell.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Banco do Brasil disclosed a 45.4% drop in adjusted net profit for 2025, totaling R$ 20.7 billion, affected by new accounting rules and rising default rates. In the fourth quarter, profit reached R$ 5.7 billion, down about 45% to 47% year-over-year. The bank forecasts recovery in 2026, with profit between R$ 22 billion and R$ 26 billion.

The Argentine Textile Industries Federation (FITA) reported that textile production fell 23.9% year-over-year in January 2026, the sharpest drop since 2016. Factories operated at just 24% of installed capacity, with warnings over low-priced imports impacting jobs and competition.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Stuttgart-based sports car maker Porsche reported a first-quarter 2026 net profit of 391 million euros, down nearly 25 percent from the previous year. Revenue fell five percent to 8.4 billion euros. Reasons include high costs for a strategic shift, US tariffs, and declining sales.

 

 

 

Ojú-ìwé yìí nlo kuki

A nlo kuki fun itupalẹ lati mu ilọsiwaju wa. Ka ìlànà àṣírí wa fun alaye siwaju sii.
Kọ