Currently reading: Jaguar Land Rover begins recovery from £861m loss in 2020
Boss Thierry Bollore says result reflects “significant progress” made under firm’s transformation strategy

Jaguar Land Rover has posted pre-tax profits of £534 million in the first three months of 2021 before exceptional charges, with boss Thierry Bolloré saying the result shows the “significant progress” made under the firm’s bold transformation strategy.

But the British car maker, owned by the Indian Tata Group, will record an annual loss of £861m for the financial year ending 31 March, due to charges incurred as part of its cost-cutting transformation plan.

Jaguar Land Rover sold 123,483 vehicles in the first three months of 2021, representing a 12.4% year-on-year rise. It was boosted by a strong performance in China, where sales where up 127% over the same period last year, when the country was worst hit by Covid-19 restrictions.

While Jaguar Land Rover’s total sales of 439,588 vehicles was down 13.6% on the 2019/2020 financial year, the firm was boosted by year-on-year growth in China and the strong performance of the new Defender, 45,255 examples of which were sold during the financial year.

The strong results for the last quarter boosted Jaguar Land Rover’s annual pre-tax profits for the financial year to 31 March before exceptional charges to £662 million. But the firm incurred £1.5 billion of exceptional charges, including £952m in non-cash investment write-downs and £534m of restructuring charges. That means the company will record an annual loss of £861m, compared with a loss of £422m for 2019/2020.

Jaguar Land Rover cited £332m in profit and cash improvements relating to its Project Charge+ restructure plan in the final quarter, which it says brings the total saving to £6 billion since the programme was launched in 2018.

Bolloré said: “I have been encouraged by the company’s resilience and strong recovery during a uniquely challenging year.”

He added: “Our strategy is ambitious and it will make us more agile, efficient and sustainable. Although it is still early days, we have made significant progress in implementing it. This has reaffirmed my confidence that we have the right strategy, the right people and the right product plans to deliver against our targets. Jaguar Land Rover is well placed to emerge from the pandemic as a stronger and more resilient company that is able to navigate and capitalise on the opportunities ahead.”

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James Attwood

James Attwood, digital editor
Title: Acting magazine editor

James is Autocar's acting magazine editor. Having served in that role since June 2023, he is in charge of the day-to-day running of the world's oldest car magazine, and regularly interviews some of the biggest names in the industry to secure news and features, such as his world exclusive look into production of Volkswagen currywurst. Really.

Before first joining Autocar in 2017, James spent more than a decade in motorsport journalist, working on Autosport, autosport.com, F1 Racing and Motorsport News, covering everything from club rallying to top-level international events. He also spent 18 months running Move Electric, Haymarket's e-mobility title, where he developed knowledge of the e-bike and e-scooter markets. 

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Caddylad 19 May 2021
JLR are still rather wobbly at present, however TATA are investing in JLR because, currently they are one of its biggest valuable assets, if you're really looking into their investments.

Yes, the Jaguar brand is really struggling, but the Land Rover brand will support Jaguars electrification programme investments, especially now the new 2022 Range Rover is on its way. I live in Spain and seen prototypes the last few days being driven through the Andalusian region looking quite close to Autocars rendering pictures.. looks good! Then the Sport comes out and makes more money...JLR has still got many lessons to learn but I think with Tatas investment, they will turn the brand's around

Bimfan 19 May 2021

Re-arranging the deck chairs on the Titanic, seems an appropriate comment.

Just quickly analysing the figures, approximately 10-15% of all JLR sales are currently new Defender. That will not last long once that limited market is filled. More new products are required and not just the nip and tuck upgrades seen recently. 

Tata will not pour money into a black hole for ever, so Bollore really has to produce the figures to back his strong rhetoric.  

TStag 18 May 2021

Apparently a lot of the write off comes from the scrapping the the Jaguar XJ/ Road Rover project. Seems bonkers to me to invest such vast sums and then scraps these models. A brave decision by Bollore....