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Aston Martin Lagonda (LSE:AML) shares have continued to make headlines over the previous two years. Traders had been offered a reasonably clean path to profitability, however that merely hasn’t been the case.
In 2024, the corporate reported a pretax lack of £289.1m, widening from £239.8m in 2023. This was reported alongside a decline in income by 3% to £1.58bn. It was a painful 12 months for the enduring carmaker, as wholesale volumes additionally fell 9%, reflecting provide chain disruptions and weaker demand in key markets like China.
Regardless of these setbacks, Aston Martin managed to attain a uncommon optimistic money circulate within the last quarter of 2024. New product launches and improved gross sales of high-margin fashions drove this achievement.

Failing to impress the market
The corporate’s share worth has mirrored its monetary struggles, plummeting by over 96% since its flotation in 2018. As of April 2025, shares are buying and selling close to their 52-week low of 56p, down considerably from their year-peak of 172.8p in April 2024.
Rising debt ranges, which ballooned to £1.16bn on the finish of 2024, have compounded Aston Martin’s challenges. To handle these monetary woes, the corporate has reduce jobs and scaled again manufacturing plans. Moreover, it has obtained continued monetary backing from Lawrence Stroll’s Yew Tree Consortium, which lately elevated its stake to 33% by a £52.5m funding.
One other promise
In 2023, Aston Martin Lagonda set formidable monetary targets as a part of its turnaround technique. Govt Chair Lawrence Stroll deliberate to attain £2bn in income and £500m in adjusted EBITDA (earnings earlier than curiosity, taxation, dividends, and amortisation) by 2024/25.
Initially, these objectives had been tied to promoting 10,000 autos yearly. Nevertheless, CFO Doug Lafferty later expressed confidence that the corporate might meet these targets with simply 8,000 models per 12 months.
Nevertheless, this simply hasn’t occurred. The enterprise continues to be making promising although. New CEO Adrian Hallmark has outlined plans for a “materially improved” monetary efficiency in 2025, with expectations of optimistic adjusted EBITDA and free money circulate within the second half of the 12 months. The launch of the Valhalla, Aston Martin’s first mid-engine plug-in hybrid, is anticipated to play a vital position on this turnaround.
Now, the group plans to attain income of £2.5bn and adjusted EBIT of £400m by 2027/28. Nevertheless, given its historic struggles, it’s unclear whether or not it may acheive these targets.
Excessive threat, excessive reward
I had beforehand been an investor in Aston Martin, nevertheless it’s not for me anymore. Aston Martin’s journey stays fraught with dangers. What’s extra, the corporate ships round 2,000 autos to the Americas on common. Trump’s tariffs put these numbers in peril. Lastly, whereas administration is taking steps to stabilise operations and enhance profitability, the corporate’s lengthy historical past of monetary troubles and rising reliance on exterior funding are large considerations. I do assume it’ll survive the 12 months, nevertheless it wants a turnaround to ensure its future.