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Jaguar Land Rover to axe 500 management jobs in UK

Jaguar Land Rover to axe 500 management jobs in UK

Yahoo17-07-2025
Tata-owned Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) is to axe up to 500 management jobs in the UK through a voluntary redundancy programme.
The company has said that around 1.5% of its UK workforce would be impacted by the job cuts and described the programme as part of 'normal business practice'.
However, the move comes after JLR reported a 10.7% year-on-year (YoY) decline in quarterly wholesale volumes (quarter ended 30 June) which it said were in line with the company's expectations amidst a challenging period.
When it posted the disappointing quarterly results, the British carmaker highlighted the 'planned wind down' of legacy Jaguar models (effectively a hiatus to supply, with production of ICE models ended before BEV models and capacity come on stream) ahead of the launch of 'new Jaguar' in 2026. There was also a temporary halt in shipments of models to the US during April 2025, following the introduction of US import tariffs.
As part of the transformation of Jaguar to a new portfolio of electric vehicles from 2026, production of Jaguar XE, XF and F‑TYPE, produced at Castle Bromwich in the UK, ended in May 2024, while I‑PACE and E‑PACE, produced in Austria, ended in December 2024.
Wholesale volumes for the quarter stood at 87,286 units, excluding the Chery Jaguar Land Rover China JV, marking a 21.7% decrease against Q4 FY25.
"Jaguar Land Rover to axe 500 management jobs in UK" was originally created and published by Just Auto, a GlobalData owned brand.
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  • Yahoo

Virgin Media O2 to resume switch off next month leaving these phones with no internet

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Can his golf course 'further' US-UK relations? Trump will use meeting with prime minister to try

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He was loaned to RB Leipzig at the end of the winter window in a deal that gave the German Bundesliga side an option to buy the now 19-year-old this summer, indicating Villa did not view him as having a longer-term future with them. Leipzig decided against exercising that option but have borrowed him again for the whole of the upcoming season. If Villa developed reservations about Nedeljkovic, there was greater excitement about Sverre Nypan. They were frontrunners to land the teenage midfielder from Norway's Rosenborg. Staff made trips there to monitor Nypan, with detailed work going into convincing him to join their project. Monchi had dinner with the family and built a good relationship with Nypan's father. His case was both different from how Villa recruited 'potential players' and the same. Nypan's acquisition, if achieved, would generate plenty of internal excitement at the club. Though the initial plan was for the 18-year-old to form part of Emery's squad and build minutes, Villa were also amenable to the idea of him going out on loan in the first season. The longer Nypan refused to commit, the club lost more confidence that he would. Instead, Nypan has since joined Manchester City in a deal worth £12.5million. Villa moving for Nypan fell outside the bracket of relatively-unknown players arriving at the club. He, similar to their pursuit of Toulouse defender Jaydee Canvot (Villa have made an opening offer for the 18-year-old), was on a larger financial scale than those kinds of deals. Going into this year's winter transfer window, Villa wanted to sign a right-back, with senior options considered. When they were all deemed financially unviable, they looked to Spanish second-division side Levante's then 21-year-old, Andres Garcia, who was available for €7m and regarded as a market opportunity. 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Whether Garcia is Villa's first-team right-back of the future is another question but if he continues to rack up appearances, there is a possibility he can be sold for two to three times the amount he cost. Also in January, Villa finalised an agreement with Turkish club Kasimpasa for teen centre-back Yasin Ozcan to join them in this window. The 19-year-old has signed a contract until 2030, with the fee being €7m plus a further €1m in possible add-ons. Villa's scouting system extracted a good amount of data on Ozcan, due to him making his top-flight debut at 16 and playing 81 games for Kasimpasa to that point (he got to 94 before season's end), combined with caps at various youth levels with Turkey. From Villa's perspective, it was clear he was on the path to be a full international before too long, which would accelerate his value. And they were right — he made his debut for Turkey in a friendly against Mexico last month. They noted how Ozcan was adept in different formations and positions (he can operate at full-back), while possessing the gold-dust-like centre-back requirement of being left-footed. Emery has tried him at left-back and on the left of a back three in pre-season, which means he can add depth to the Villa first team, or to that of another club he joins on loan before the September 1 transfer deadline. Athletic, left-footed centre-backs are simpler to make money on. Last summer, Villa signed teenage central defender Yeimar Mosquera from Colombian second-tier side Orsomarso before loaning him to sister club Real Union in the Spanish third division for the first half of the campaign. Mosquera's low-cost transfer was facilitated partly because of Villa's relationship with his representatives, DV7; Damian Vidagany, the club's director of football operations, was formerly the agency's chief executive. Now 20, Mosquera is involved in Villa's pre-season as Emery wants to take a closer look before deciding on a longer-term strategy for his development. Advertisement This month, Villa confirmed the €5m signing of Modou Keba Cisse from Austrian side LASK, edging out France's Troyes for his services and so keeping the 19-year-old out of the clutches of the City Football Group (CFG), which owns the Ligue 2 side. He will be loaned back to LASK for the coming season. Cisse only joined them last July from the Be Sport Academy in Senegal and didn't make his league debut until February, so the data available on him is a much lower sample size than some of the other young additions mentioned in this article, but Villa's checks indicate there's something promising about him. 'I brought him to the second team initially,' Luka Pavlovic, who was LASK's under-18s coach at the time, tells The Athletic. 'He went on trial and I said: 'He is the next Pogba' — he was a midfielder then. 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