Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Brexit: Aston Martin says luxury cars to get cheaper if UK crashes out with no deal

Chief executive Andy Palmer says company has done what it can to prepare for disorderly exit from EU

Neil Lancefield
Thursday 04 April 2019 11:17 BST
Comments
The production line of the firm’s HQ in Gaydon
The production line of the firm’s HQ in Gaydon (Reuters)

The boss of luxury car manufacturer Aston Martin has suggested his firm could benefit if sterling collapses following a no-deal Brexit.

Andy Palmer said the firm’s cars may become cheaper to buy if the UK withdraws from the European Union without an agreement in place.

He told an automotive conference in London that the UK firm is “less exposed” but equally frustrated about the prospect of a hard Brexit compared with other carmakers.

“We have more elasticity around pricing because it’s a luxury good,” he said.

“If tariffs come in place you can argue we have a greater ability to pass some of that on to the customer.

“We also note that because we trade and manufacture in pounds, if there’s a hard Brexit the pound will collapse, our cars get cheaper and we can compensate for the tariffs.”

But Mr Palmer warned the effect on the supply of materials from Brexit is “unwelcome”.

He said: “The bigger deal is around importation of parts. A substantial part of our car comes from the European Union.

“If you cannot make cars on a just-in-time basis, you have to do it in bits. Getting your bits through Dover and Calais, particularly at the start of a no-deal Brexit, is of concern.

“We think we’ve done everything we can to preserve those supply chains.

“We’ve increased stock, we’ve changed our supply channels. We’re already bringing parts in through different ports.”

Mr Palmer said Aston Martin has increased the UK-based content of its cars to beyond 55 per cent in case the UK is trading under World Trade Organisation rules after Brexit.

He added: “All of this is unwelcome. We are absolutely behind the principles of free trade all over the world but in terms of ‘are we ready for a no-deal Brexit?’ I think we’re as ready as one can be.”

PA

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in