Scottish Daily Mail

Supercar maker McLaren to axe 1,200 jobs

- by James Salmon

BRITISH supercar maker McLaren is cutting more than a quarter of its workforce as it battles to survive the coronaviru­s crisis.

Just a day after the Government announced car dealership­s would be allowed to reopen from next Monday, the Surrey-based company said 1,200 of its 4,000 workers would lose their jobs.

The troubled manufactur­er, whose cars sell for between £175,000 and £2m, has been racing to secure emergency funds to shore up its finances.

But its pleas for a £150m loan from the Government have been rejected, and it has been instructed to exhaust all other options first. Its road car sales have all but evaporated during the lockdown, while its income from Formula One and its Applied Technologi­es business, which supplies equipment to motor racing teams, has also disappeare­d as racing has been suspended. The latest blow to the industry comes with Japanese giant Nissan expected to announce up to 20,000 job cuts this week, raising the prospect of redundanci­es at the UK’s biggest car plant in Sunderland. The announceme­nt is expected as soon as tomorrow.

McLaren becomes the latest big-name firm – after Rolls-Royce, British Airways and Tui – to cut jobs after furloughin­g employees under the Government’s job retention scheme.

Chairman Paul Walsh, previously boss of drinks giant Diageo, said: ‘We deeply regret the impact that this restructur­e will have on all our people, but especially those whose jobs will be affected.

‘It is a course of action we have worked hard to avoid, having undertaken dramatic cost-saving measures across all areas of the business. But we now have no other choice but to reduce the size of our workforce.’

Cost-cutting has included slashing the pay of staff who have not been furloughed. The fragile state of McLaren’s finances means it has been unable to borrow under the Government-backed lending schemes set up by Chancellor Rishi Sunak in March.

After seeing its direct appeal for a bailout loan snubbed by the Government, the company has been trying to borrow £275m by mortgaging its collection of classic cars – including those driven by legendary Brazilian racing driver Ayrton Senna.

The firm also intends to put up its swish headquarte­rs in Woking, designed by architect Norman Foster, as collateral.

But this strategy has been resisted by some investors.

The firm’s shareholde­rs, led by Bahrain’s sovereign wealth fund Mumtalakat, injected £300m of equity into the company in March.

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