The Daily Telegraph

Aston seeks fourth chief in as many years

- By Matt Oliver

THE billionair­e chairman of Aston Martin Lagonda is hunting for his fourth chief executive in four years.

Lawrence Stroll, who is also the company’s biggest shareholde­r, is said to have contacted current and former bosses of other luxury car manufactur­ers to ask whether they would be interested in taking the top job.

The role is currently held by Amedeo Felisa, a veteran Ferrari executive who was parachuted in 21 months ago after the departure of Tobias Moers.

Mr Moers in turn had only been in post for just under two years. His predecesso­r, Andy Palmer, was ousted following Mr Stroll’s 2020 rescue of the business. Mr Palmer later said he learned about his removal from a journalist who called him to ask for comment. In Mr Moers’ case, Mr Stroll initially denied he was seeking to replace the former chief executive before later announcing his immediate departure “by mutual agreement”.

Under arrangemen­ts that have been in place since he took control of the company, Mr Stroll has remained as executive chairman of Aston throughout. The identities of the car executives so far approached by Mr Stroll were not revealed by Bloomberg, which first reported the story. A spokesman for Aston Martin yesterday said the company did not comment on “rumour and speculatio­n”.

However, an Aston source did not deny the reports. The insider pushed back against suggestion­s that Mr Stroll was unhappy with Mr Felisa, who was previously chief executive of Ferrari from 2008 to 2016, but said it was normal for public companies to ensure there were proper succession plans in place for senior executives – pointing to Mr Felisa’s 77 years of age.

“Amedeo remains very much at the heart of leading the launch of our next generation of cars,” the insider added.

One former employee questioned the impact of repeated management changes on company morale, adding: “One of the issues you have is that whoever is in charge is not really a genuine CEO. A chief executive is not really the executive if there is an executive chairman sitting above them, who is getting involved in all the big decisions.”

Aston is preparing to launch its latest two-seater Vantage sports car next Monday, following the launch of the DB12 last summer.

The cars are seen as central to Mr Stroll’s transforma­tion plans for the company, alongside the DBX707 “supercar SUV”.

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