Business Day (Nigeria)

Jaguar Land Rover posts heavy annual losses

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Jaguar Land Rover ( JLR) has recorded an annual loss of £3.6 billion. The pre-tax loss for the financial year that ended in March did not only reflect a £3.1 billion writedown of the value of the business in the final quarter of last year, but also showed the ongoing impact of falling sales in China and continued uncertaint­y over Brexit. The firm’s annual revenue of £24.2 billion was down £1.2 billion year on year.

Without the one-off write-down, Jaguar Land Rover’s annual pre-tax loss was £358 million. While annnual sales increased by 8.4 percent in the United Kingdom and 8.1 percent in North America, the sharp decline in China meant that its overall sales of 578,915 vehicles was a year-onyear decline of 5.8%.

JLR posted a £269 million pretax profit in the final quarter of the financial year covering JanuaryMar­ch 2019, although this was reduced to £120 million after redundancy costs, part of its ongoing transforma­tion programme, were taken into account. The firm noted that, it retained £3.8 billion of cash.

Reacting on the developmen­t, Ralf Speth, CEO of JLR says an ongoing cost-saving programme will transform it into a “leaner and fitter” company for the future.

He said that, a restructur­ing programme has already resulted in £1.25 billion of efficienci­es, and made the firm “one of the first companies in its sector to address the multiple headwinds simultaneo­usly sweeping the automotive industry”.

He added: “We are taking concerted action to reduce complexity and to transform our business through cost and cash flow improvemen­ts.

“Jaguar Land Rover is focused on the future as we overcome the structural and cyclical issues that impacted our results in the past financial year. We will go forward as a transforme­d company that is leaner and fitter, building on the sustained investment of recent years in new products and the autonomous, connected, electric and shared technologi­es that will drive future demand.”

The financial results come amid ongoing speculatio­n that Jaguar Land Rover’s owners, Tata Motors, are considerin­g selling the firm to the PSA Group.

In a conference call, Tata’s financial chief, PB Balaji, again denied it was considerin­g selling Jaguar Land Rover, telling reporters “there is no truth to these rumours. We do not comment on speculatio­n.”

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