JLR’s profit recovery plan disappoints investors despite US growth push

Summary

  • JLR’s 4% profit margin forecast disappoints investors
  • Parent Tata Motors shares tumble 10%
  • JLR pivot to U.S. follows slow recovery in China

NEW DELHI, (Reuters) – Jaguar ​Land Rover will prioritise growth in the U.S. as it seeks to counter weakness ‌in its traditional stronghold of China, but will deliver only a 4% profit margin, it said on Wednesday, sending shares of its Indian parent Tata Motors tumbling.

The British carmaker’s plan to rebuild profitability and cut costs fell short ​of investors’ expectations, triggering a selloff with shares of Tata Motors falling by as much ​as 10%. JLR contributes about 80% of Tata’s revenues.

In line with weakness across the ⁠auto sector, the Range Rover manufacturer has navigated a difficult year. Challenges have included U.S. trade tariffs, ​a cyberattack that halted production, and cost and supply chain disruptions due to the Iran war.

JLR’s profit ​margin fell to 0.7% last fiscal year from near double-digits in earlier years. While a 4% forecast for the current year is an improvement, it is far from the 10% margin the company had targeted.

A ‘HYPER-FOCUS’ ON THE US

JLR, ​however, said it hopes a “hyper focus” on the U.S., where a wealthy elite is boosting demand ​for luxury, will allow it to sell high-margin products and boost profits.

“Our aspiration, in the coming years, is to ‌grow ⁠our U.S. business to the size of the entire JLR business as it exists today,” CEO PB Balaji said in a press note.

Through its partnership with Stellantis, JLR will expand in the North American market where it has no manufacturing presence, marking a shift from China.

The world’s largest car market, ​China was a major ​source of growth for ⁠JLR, but a combination of economic weakness there and a cutthroat local industry has made it much harder for international companies to compete.

The recovery ​plan also includes a diversification of its strategy for powertrains needed for ​EVs. The carmaker ⁠plans to invest in hybrid technology for its Range Rover, Defender and Discovery brands, which largely run on conventional fuel, as it seeks to counter a slowdown in electrification globally.

JLR reiterated plans to cut $2.3 ⁠billion in ​costs over two years and reduce volumes required for breakeven ​to 300,000 units from 425,000 units earlier. It maintained an £18 billion ($24.12 billion) investment plan from fiscal 2024.

($1 = 0.7462 pounds)

Reporting by ​Aditi Shah, Urvi Dugar and Bharath Rajeswaran in Bengaluru; Editing by Harikrishnan Nair, Eileen Soreng and Barbara Lewis