logo
The CEO of Jaguar and Land Rover is retiring after two years in the top job

The CEO of Jaguar and Land Rover is retiring after two years in the top job

Auto Car3 days ago
In a recent interview with Autocar, Mardell revealed that he had driven the new GT and said it was the "most fun I've had" in his time as JLR boss.
"It was stunning in terms of its speed, its acceleration, its performance, but also how it delivered the power with a real sense of character," he said. "The chassis team are really excited about the possibilities of the vehicle.'
Speaking more generally about Jaguar's prospects as an all-electric luxury brand, Mardell said he was "certain we will have wait lists which are significant relative to the volumes we aspire for with the first product'.
He continued: "In today's market conditions, I don't see anything which is going to concern me about the success of the new Jaguar in this new world at all, actually.'
Mardell leaves JLR in a position of far greater stability than that it was in when he took the top job, but the company still faces strong headwinds.
Chief among those is the imposition of new tariffs on foreign-built cars in the crucial US market, which accounts for a huge proportion of sales of JLR's most profitable models.
The UK recently secured a trade deal that reduced the US import tariff on its exported cars from an initially mooted 25% to 10%, which is good news for the Solihull-built Range Rover models and the Halewood-produced Range Rover Evoque and Discovery Sport.
But that levy only applies to the first 100,000 cars shipped to the US in a year, meaning any JLR models shipped above that number are liable to attract the higher 25% fee.
Similarly, while the EU has now struck a deal with the US, cars shipped from the region to North America will still attract a 15% tariff, which will have significant implications for the Defender and Discovery, both built in Slovakia.
Mardell's eventual replacement will also have to negotiate JLR's inevitable shift to a pure-electric line-up over the coming years, in the face of waning global demand for premium EVs.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Indian equity benchmarks to open higher after five weeks of losses
Indian equity benchmarks to open higher after five weeks of losses

Reuters

time14 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Indian equity benchmarks to open higher after five weeks of losses

Aug 4 (Reuters) - India's equity benchmarks are expected to open higher on Monday, following five straight weeks of losses as investors assess U.S. tariffs and the Federal Reserve's future policy action after weak labour market data. Gift Nifty futures were trading at 24,678.5 points as of 7:42 a.m. IST, indicating that the Nifty 50 (.NSEI), opens new tab will open above its previous close of 24,565.35. The Nifty and Sensex (.BSESN), opens new tab indexes fell about 1.1% last week, marking their fifth straight weekly loss as the U.S. hit several trading partners with steep tariffs and imposed a 25% duty on India, stoking global growth worries. Meanwhile, data showed that U.S. employment growth was weaker than expected in July and the count for the prior two months was revised down significantly, increasing the probability of a September interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve. Lower U.S. interest rates are associated with lower Treasury yields and a weak dollar, making emerging market equities such as India's more attractive for foreign portfolio investors (FPIs), who have been on a selling spree recently. FPIs sold Indian shares worth $2.05 billion last month, taking their total selling in Indian equities in 2025 to $11.63 billion. Market participants will remain focused on tariffs until certainty emerges over a trade deal between the U.S. and India, analysts said. ** Conglomerate ITC ( opens new tab beats first-quarter profit estimates, buoyed by higher sales of cigarettes and packaged food, particularly in rural areas ** Tata Power ( opens new tab reports lower-than-expected quarterly profit due to weak electricity demand ** Multi Commodity Exchange of India ( opens new tab posts strong growth in profit and revenue for the first quarter, and announces a 1:5 stock split

Indian rupee seen under pressure on US tariff worries, RBI policy in focus
Indian rupee seen under pressure on US tariff worries, RBI policy in focus

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Indian rupee seen under pressure on US tariff worries, RBI policy in focus

MUMBAI, Aug 4 (Reuters) - The rupee is likely to stay under pressure this week as concerns over steep U.S. tariffs on Indian exports linger, while the Reserve Bank of India's upcoming policy decision also looms large over the currency and government bonds. The rupee closed at 87.54 against the U.S. dollar on Friday, down 1.2% for the week, pressured by persistent foreign portfolio outflows and a 25% levy on Indian exports. While the local unit is hovering near its weakest level since February, fresh tariff announcements on dozens of U.S. trading partners also pushed other Asian currencies to multi-month lows. The dollar index, meanwhile, posted its best weekly gain since 2022 as expectations of a U.S. rate cut in September faded. The odds of a reduction in September rose to 80% after data released on Friday showed that the U.S. economy added fewer jobs than expected, while the unemployment rate rose to 4.2%. Meanwhile, the maturity of a $5 billion dollar-rupee buy/sell swap conducted by the RBI earlier this year will be in focus on Monday. "It would be prudent to break the swap into delivery and rollover. The rupee has probably seen its worst for this quarter and some support will bring it to a desirable level, while not disturbing liquidity, said Alok Singh, group head of treasury at CSB Bank. Traders expect the rupee to trade between 87.00 and 87.80 this week and reckon that the central bank may continue to intervene to limit excessive volatility. Meanwhile, India's 10-year benchmark 6.33% 2035 bond yield , settled at 6.3680% last week, up 2 basis points (bps). Traders anticipate the yield will remain in the 6.33%-6.38% band till the RBI's policy decision on Wednesday. The range could be tested on either side, depending on policymakers' decision and guidance. Although some market participants expect a rate cut, a majority of economists polled by Reuters believe RBI will hold rates steady this time. "While it is a close call, our bias remains for a 25 bps rate cut at the August meeting," Citi said. A drop in India's retail inflation to a more-than-six-year low in June, coupled with expectations that it may slip to a record low in July, have heightened hopes of a rate cut. However, RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra last month said that the bar for further easing is now higher than it would have been if the stance was still "accommodative". The central bank slashed rates by a steeper-than-expected 50 bps in June and shifted its policy stance to "neutral" from "accommodative". "As the RBI awaits the impact of the large easing it has already done, we believe it will stay put on repo rate changes on 6 August," HSBC said in a note. Key Factors: India ** July HSBC services PMI and composite PMI - August 5, Tuesday (10:30 a.m.) ** Reserve Bank of India's monetary policy decision - August 6, Wednesday (10:00 a.m.)(Reuters poll - no change) U.S. ** June factory orders - August 4, Monday (7:30 p.m. IST) ** June international trade - August 5, Tuesday (6:00 p.m. IST) ** July S&P Global composite PMI final - August 5, Tuesday (7:15 p.m. IST) ** July S&P Global services PMI final - August 5, Tuesday (7:15 p.m. IST) ** July ISM non-manufacturing PMI - August 5, Tuesday (7:30 p.m. IST) ** Initial weekly jobless claims for week to July 28 - August 7, Thursday (6:00 p.m. IST)

Klarna considers autumn IPO revival
Klarna considers autumn IPO revival

Finextra

time2 hours ago

  • Finextra

Klarna considers autumn IPO revival

After pausing plans for its initial public offering amid market turbulence in the spring, Klarna is looking to revive its listing this autumn. 0 The buy now, pay later giant and its advisers are preparing to go public in September or October, according to a Sky News, citing a memo. However, no firm decision has been made with the move only expected if market conditions are conducive. In April, the Swedish company paused plans to list its ordinary shares on the New York Stock Exchange amid market turbulence sparked by President Donald Trump's tariffs. The firm had been looking to raise in the region of $1 billion with a market valuation of $15 billion. Having made its name as a BNPL pioneer, Klarna is busy diversifying. Last week it scored an Electronic Money Institution licence from the UK's FCA, paving the way for a full-frontal assault on the retail banking market.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store