Yorkshire Post

Aston Martin sets aside £30m for Brexit

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LUXURY CAR manufactur­er Aston Martin Lagonda has revealed plans to set aside up to £30m to help it weather Brexit disruption as it posted a £68.2m annual loss.

The maker of cars favoured by British spy James Bond said its board had given the goahead for the fund as it steps up contingenc­y planning for a possible no-deal Brexit.

In its first set of annual results since floating last October, the company added it was taking action to “mitigate the impact on the business from potential supply chain disruption should the UK withdraw from the European Union without an agreement or in an unstructur­ed manner”.

The comments came as it reported the hefty pre-tax losses for 2018, against profits of £85m in 2017.

This was due to £136m of costs for its stock market debut.

The group’s shares tumbled as Aston also cautioned that underlying earnings are set to be lower in the first half of 2019.

The company said: “Since our third quarter trading update in November 2018, geopolitic­al and economic uncertaint­ies have increased.

“In response, we have put contingenc­y plans in place to protect production and customer deliveries should the UK leave the European Union without an agreement or in an unstructur­ed manner.”

Aston said it had so far spent only a “minimal” amount on contingenc­y plans and had committed but not spent around £2m on revised supply chain routes.

The results showed a 26 per cent rise in wholesale car sales by volume in 2018 to 6,441, while revenues increased 25 per cent to £1.1bn

It confirmed aims to increase wholesale volumes to between 7,100 and 7,300 in 2019.

With costs of its initial public offering stripped out, the group saw underlying operating profits rise 18 per cent to £146.9m.

Andy Palmer, Aston Martin president and group chief executive, said: “2018 was an outstandin­g year for Aston Martin Lagonda, delivering strong growth, with improving revenues, unit sales and adjusted profits.”

Mr Palmer added that the group was navigating “uncertaint­ies and disruption impacting the wider auto industry”.

2018 was an outstandin­g year for Aston Martin Lagonda.

Andy Palmer, Aston Martin president and group chief executive

 ?? PICTURE: DREW GIBSON / SWNS.COM ?? LIVE AND LET DRIVE: Aston Martin, the car maker of choice for James Bond, says it is taking action to mitigate the impact of potential Brexit disruption.
PICTURE: DREW GIBSON / SWNS.COM LIVE AND LET DRIVE: Aston Martin, the car maker of choice for James Bond, says it is taking action to mitigate the impact of potential Brexit disruption.

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