The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Aston Martin sales being driven by its DBX sports utility

- AUGUST GRAHAM

The classic Aston Martin is more associated with James Bond movies than practical driving and SUVs. However, the launch of a new SUV has revived flagging sales at Aston Martin, putting it on track to sell more cars this year than it did in 2019.

More than 1,350 of the luxury vehicles were bought by customers in the first three months of 2021 compared with just 578 in the same period a year earlier – with the increase attributed to the firm’s first-ever SUV, which launched last year.

The company sold more than 740 Aston Martin DBX models, as the SUV is called, making up 55% of all sales in the first three months of the year.

Aston Martin struggled to sell cars last year, with the number of sales dropping by 42% to just 3,394 across the 12 months.

However, as 2020 ended, there were signs of a return to near-normal levels, with sales in the last three months only a little lower than they had been a year earlier, dominated by the DBX.

It reflects the increasing popularity of SUVs on roads around the world.

A study from the New Weather Institute last month found that while a decade ago only one in 10 cars sold in the UK was an SUV, the figure is now four in 10.

The Internatio­nal Energy Agency has found that SUVs – which emit 25% more carbon than a medium-sized car – were the second-biggest contributo­r to an increase in global carbon dioxide emissions between 2010 and 2018, ahead of heavy industry and aviation.

Aston Martin said it is on track to sell around 6,000 cars this year, leaving its 2021 guidance unchanged.

The company expects this to increase to around 10,000 vehicles in the year ending 2025, and anticipate­s £2 billion in revenue that year.

Revenue for the firm reached £224.4 million in the first quarter of 2021, a 153% increase, with pre-tax loss dropping from £110.1m to £42.2m.

Chief executive Tobias Moers said: “I am pleased with our performanc­e in the first three months of the year, delivering results in line with our expectatio­ns of good growth and progress on the path to improved profitabil­ity and cash generation.”

 ??  ?? PROVING POPULAR: The luxury DBX, Aston Martin’s first-ever SUV, has been credited with reviving struggling sales.
PROVING POPULAR: The luxury DBX, Aston Martin’s first-ever SUV, has been credited with reviving struggling sales.

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