Aston Martin secures ยฃ50m financing as it posts another loss


Aston Martin Lagonda has secured a fresh ยฃ50 million worth of financing after reporting another quarterly loss, but the carmaker set its sights on a boost from its new sportscar.

The British luxury carmaker said the automotive industry was grappling with numerous challenges including US tariff policy and war in the Middle East, while it has struggled with consecutive losses and weakening sales.

The company said it had agreed to the new ยฃ50 million facility with the investment vehicle led by billionaire Lawrence Stroll, who is a major shareholder and part owner of Aston Martin.

Mr Stroll has been overseeing the businessโ€™s efforts to turn its performance around and shore up its balance sheet.

This included plans to cut up to nearly 600 jobs, representing 20% of its workforce, under the latest restructuring programme.

It comes as it reported an adjusted loss before tax and interest of ยฃ56.9 million for the first three months of 2026.

This was slightly less than the ยฃ64.5 million loss reported for the same period a year ago.

The total volume of sales decreased slightly to 939 vehicles in the first quarter, tumbling by more than a quarter in the UK but partly offset by an 11% increase in the Americas.

But it is expecting to benefit from selling around 500 Valhalla cars during the financial year โ€“ the carmakerโ€™s first plug-in hybrid mid-engine supercar, which has a starting price of ยฃ850,000.

Demand for the personalisation of vehicles was also driving an increase to revenues, according to the group.

Aston Martin said it was expecting profitability to improve and head โ€œtowards breakevenโ€ for the year.

But the company highlighted industry-wide challenges including additional US tariffs, changes to Chinaโ€™s ultra-luxury car taxes and an ongoing reliance onย a stable global supply chain.

Under the terms of a deal agreed last year, up to 100,000 UK vehicles can be imported to the US at a 10% tariff during a year, with any sales above that threshold subject to a 27.5% tariff.

Furthermore, Aston Martin said the war in the Middle East had no significant impact on the business in the first quarter, but stressed that it โ€œcontinues to monitor the evolving situation and its potential impact on global demand, customer confidence and supply chainsโ€.

Adrian Hallmark, Aston Martinโ€™s chief executive, said the latest figures โ€œconfirm that we are on track to deliver material financial improvement this yearโ€.

โ€œWhilst we remain mindful of the uncertain global macroeconomic and geopolitical context, including the current conflict in the Middle East, we are focused on executing our strategy and achieving our unchanged 2026 full year guidance,โ€ he said.

โ€œFurther financial improvement is expected through the rest of the year as we benefit from our expanding core model range, continued Valhalla deliveries following terrific recent five-star driving reviews and ongoing operational discipline.โ€

Leave comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked with *.