Overview
- The company launched a consultation to remove about 600 roles, targeting roughly £40 million in annual savings and booking an £18.7 million restructuring provision.
- Aston Martin reported a 2025 net loss of £493.2 million as revenue fell 21% to about £1.26 billion and wholesale volumes dropped 10% to 5,448 vehicles.
- Management cited US trade measures and subdued Chinese demand as key drags, with the CEO saying tariffs under President Donald Trump were a significant factor.
- Five‑year capital spending was trimmed from £2 billion to £1.7 billion with EV investment deferred, shifting near‑term focus to hybrids such as the Valhalla.
- Liquidity moves included a £50 million sale of perpetual Formula 1 naming rights to AMR GP Holdings, while net debt remains high at roughly £1.38 billion and the 2026 outlook depends on tariff outcomes and planned Valhalla deliveries.