Aston Martin has issued one other revenue warning and agreed to promote the everlasting naming rights to its Method One staff for £50m, because the British marque grapples with falling deliveries, mounting debt and the influence of US tariffs.
The carmaker, majority-owned by Canadian billionaire Lawrence Stroll, mentioned earnings for 2025 can be worse than Metropolis forecasts, marking its fifth revenue warning since September 2024.
Analysts had anticipated the corporate to report a lack of round £184m when it publishes full-year outcomes subsequent week.
Aston Martin delivered 5,448 autos final 12 months, practically 10 per cent fewer than in 2024, as gross sales within the US have been hit by a 25 per cent tariff on imported vehicles imposed by former US president Donald Trump. The group additionally missed targets for high-margin particular version fashions.
Shares fell as a lot as 4 per cent in early buying and selling earlier than trimming losses.
Money reserves stand at round £250m, broadly secure over the previous six months however down from £360m at the beginning of 2025. The corporate’s debt pile has risen by about 70 per cent since early 2024.
To bolster liquidity, Aston Martin has agreed to promote the everlasting proper to make use of its title in Method One to its F1 staff for £50m. The staff is operated by AMR GP Holdings, a separate entity additionally managed by Stroll, that means the deal successfully represents extra funding from its proprietor.
As a result of Stroll sits on each side of the transaction and holds a 32 per cent stake in Aston Martin, the deal requires shareholder approval. Buyers representing greater than half the corporate, together with Stroll’s automobile, Geely and Mercedes-Benz, have already indicated they’ll vote in favour.
An analogous naming rights association was struck in 2024, granting the F1 staff rights till 2055.
Since taking management in 2020, Stroll has sought to reposition the model by way of new mannequin launches and repeated capital raisings. Nonetheless, the turnaround has been marked by persistent losses, manufacturing setbacks and stock challenges.
The US tariff regime added vital value stress in considered one of Aston Martin’s most essential markets. A subsequent UK-US commerce settlement lowered tariffs to 10 per cent on as much as 100,000 British-made vehicles from mid-2025, providing partial aid.
In October, the corporate reduce £300m from its funding plans and scaled again growth spending on new fashions, citing tariffs and subdued demand in China.
Regardless of the headwinds, Aston Martin pointed to approaching deliveries of its £850,000 Valhalla hypercar as a constructive signal. Round 500 models are due for supply in 2026, with greater than half of the restricted 999-production run already offered.
Nonetheless, with its share worth down roughly 50 per cent over the previous 12 months, Aston Martin’s efforts to revive profitability stay below intense scrutiny because it navigates a risky international automotive market.

