Currently reading: Aston Martin posts £119 million loss due to coronavirus impact

British car firm's sales nearly halve in first three months of the year – but firm says crucial DBX is on track

Aston Martin Lagonda Ltd posted a pre-tax loss of £118.9 million in the first three months of this year, with sales falling by nearly half due to the impact of the Covid-19 crisis – but the firm insists the crucial new DBX SUV remains on track to go on sale this summer.

The British firm sold 578 cars from January until the end of March, a 45% drop from the 1057 in the same three months of 2019. Notably, the average selling price of each car was £98,000, compared with an average of £160,000 in 2019. The firm attributed that to not having any limited-run special models on sale in the quarter.

Coronavirus and the car world: how Covid-19 is impacting the industry

Aston was hit hard by coronvirus lockdowns in place in China and other Asian countries for much of January and February. Sales in the region were down 74%, with those in China falling by 86%.

In the UK, sales fell only 3%, due to the lockdown only beginning in late March. Notably, sales in the US were down by 57%, despite restrictions there only being introduced in March. Aston Martin chiefs attributed some of the total decline in sales to a planned step to reduce dealer stock to balance its supply and demand.

The fall in the number of cars sold and their asking price meant Aston’s first quarter revenue of £78.6m was 60% down on the same period in 2019. The pre-tax loss of £118.9m compares with a £17.3m loss in 2019.

During the first quarter, 93% of Aston’s dealer network was either forced to close or was limited in capacity, and production was suspended at all Aston factories during March. But the firm says all 18 dealers in China, and more than 15% worldwide, are now fully open.

Aston also resumed production at its St Athan plant, where the new DBX is produced, on 5 May. The firm says it remains on track to begin deliveries of the SUV this summer.

During the quarter, a group led by billionaire Lance Stroll completed an investment in the firm that raised £536m in equity capital. As part of that deal, Stroll was named Aston’s new chairman.

Stroll said: “I am extremely pleased that DBX remains on track for deliveries in the summer and has a strong order book behind it extending into 2021. Based on these successful initial orders for DBX, we plan to unveil future derivatives starting from 2021.”

Stroll added that work on the Valkyrie hypercar “continues”, along with “refreshes” of the firm’s core sports car range. Aston said the Valkyrie will now be launched late this year, due to delays sparked by the closure of its test facilities.

The company said it is expecting trading to remain “challenging” this year due to the ongoing impact of Covid-19 and “as is prudent, the company continues to review all future funding and refinancing options to increase liquidity.”

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Stroll added: “While in the short term, as anticipated, we will have some difficulties due to the onset of Covid-19, having been in the business for a few weeks now, I am even more enthusiastic and confident in the multi-year plan that we have set out to bring new and exciting products to market to drive demand and build the Aston Martin brand.”

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James Attwood

James Attwood, digital editor
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James is Autocar's acting magazine editor. Having served in that role since June 2023, he is in charge of the day-to-day running of the world's oldest car magazine, and regularly interviews some of the biggest names in the industry to secure news and features, such as his world exclusive look into production of Volkswagen currywurst. Really.

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CharlieBrown 13 May 2020

They seem to be in a death spiral

They seem to be in a death spiral now and will need a lot of extra cash to shore up the balance sheet now

Symanski 13 May 2020

Design refresh.

CharlieBrown wrote:

They seem to be in a death spiral now and will need a lot of extra cash to shore up the balance sheet now

The only thing that can help them is to refresh their designs with a new and competent designer. Stroll s plan is to continue ahead with what has been failing Aston, and that only leads to the end of Aston Martin.

 

To save Aston Martin Marek Reichman must go. And for his failings to fire him, so does CEO Andy Palmer.