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Aston Martin confirms sacking of chief after share collapse

<span>Photograph: Sarah Lee/The Guardian</span>
Photograph: Sarah Lee/The Guardian

The luxury carmaker Aston Martin has confirmed it has sacked its chief executive Andy Palmer as part of a wider board overhaul, following a collapse in its share price and a slump in sales because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Palmer’s replacement, Tobias Moers, will join on 1 August from Mercedes-AMG, where he is the boss of the German carmaker’s high-performance division.

Palmer had served as Aston Martin’s chief executive since 2014, and the company confirmed his departure after reports over the weekend. Palmer left the company on Monday.

Its share price collapsed 98% from its £19 float price in October 2018 to just 35p on Friday, giving it a market value of about £540m, compared with £4bn when it floated.

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Aston Martin’s shares jumped 28% to 45p on Tuesday after Palmer’s departure was announced.

Neil Wilson, the chief market analyst at the trading platform Markets.com, said the reaction from investors was “a pretty damning indictment of his tenure that the shares jumped this much after news of his sacking.”

He added: “Aston Martin has been one of the worst stock listings in living memory. Things had already got pretty horrendous before this year; the coronavirus outbreak has been the coup de grace.”

Lawrence Stroll, a billionaire who became the executive chair of Aston Martin after leading a £536m rescue deal in March, said: “The board has determined that now is the time for new leadership to deliver our plans. On behalf of the board, I would like to thank Andy for his hard work, personal commitment and dedication to Aston Martin Lagonda since 2014.”

The company’s chief manufacturing operations officer, Keith Stanton, will oversee operations until Moers takes up the top job.

The change at the top comes after a difficult few months at Aston Martin. The British company, best known as the maker of James Bond’s cars, came close to going bust for the eighth time in its 107-year history.

Over the weekend, Palmer told the Financial Timesthat he was unaware he was due to be sacked and declined to comment further.

In the company statement to the stock exchange on Tuesday, Palmer said: “It has been a privilege to serve Aston Martin Lagonda for almost six years. The launch of many new products including the new DBX demonstrates the dedication and capability of our employees.

“I would like to thank my management team and all the staff for their hard work and support, particularly during the challenges presented by Covid-19.”

The company said it had not yet finalised Palmer’s “termination arrangements”. His £1.2m salary, plus an additional £153,000 in pension contributions and benefits, had been previously criticised by investors who were disappointed by the company’s performance.

Palmer’s potential bonus and share awards were worth £6m annually if certain targets were met, although he did not receive a bonus for 2019.

At the time of the company’s stock-market listing, Palmer received 3.27m shares worth £62.2m at the float price of £19 per share. He immediately sold £29.2m worth of shares to settle tax and national insurance due, and was allowed by the company to sell a further £6.6m of shares and keep the proceeds.

Aston Martin also announced the appointment of Peter Espenhahn as chair of the audit and risk committee and Lord Carrington as chair of the remuneration committee.

Stroll agreed in recent weeks to inject more than £75m in short-term funding to enable the company to fight off a cash crunch as it battled stock market turmoil.

The carmaker has been further hit by the coronavirus pandemic, which forced it to close 90% of its dealerships around the world and caused its sales to plunge.

Earlier this month, Aston Martin reported a loss of £119m for the first quarter of the year, which pushed its shares to a record low.

The company said Moers had a track record of turning businesses around and Stroll added: “He is the right leader for Aston Martin Lagonda as we implement our strategy for the business to achieve its full potential.”

Aston Martin, like other European carmakers, was forced to stop production for several weeks because of the coronavirus crisis. It closed its two factories at its main site at Gaydon in Warwickshire and its facility at St Athan in south Wales, which had been preparing to start production of its DBX SUV.