logo
Jaguar Land Rover CEO Mardell to retire at end of 2025

Jaguar Land Rover CEO Mardell to retire at end of 2025

The Advertiser2 days ago
Adrian Mardell, CEO of Jaguar Land Rover (JLR), has decided to retire and leave the automaker after 35 years at the firm.
A spokesperson confirmed the news to Autocar Professional India, and added, "His successor will be announced in due course". It's unclear right now whether the automaker's new CEO will come from inside the company, another automaker or supplier, or from outside the industry altogether.
Mr Mardell became Jaguar Land Rover's interim CEO at the end of 2022 after his predecessor Thierry Bollore quit suddenly "for personal reasons" after just two years in the job. Mr Mardell signed a three year contract in the middle of 2023.
CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal.
Prior to becoming CEO, he worked largely on the financial side, was deputy chief financial officer (CFO) from 2008 before later adding chief transformation officer to his responsibilities, and then becoming CFO in 2019.
During his relatively short time in charge, Mr Mardell trimmed the company's net debt to around zero, and brought the British automaker back into the black, with the company making a £1.8 billion ($3.7 billion) profit in the year to March 2025.
The turnaround has come courtesy of strong sales from the Defender and Range Rover ranges, which have helped the firm achieve a strong profit margin of 8.5 per cent during the previous financial year.
After taking control of JLR, Mr Mardell continued his predecessor's Reimagine plan to turn Jaguar into an Bentley-chasing EV-only brand, and introduce mild hybrid, plug-in hybrid and pure electric drivetrains to Land Rover models.
In April 2023 he renamed the firm JLR, and split Land Rover into three new brands — Defender, Discovery and Range Rover — to sit alongside Jaguar.
Despite the automaker's rosy-looking financials, there are storm clouds on the horizon. Tariffs, which have seemingly been rising and falling on a daily basis in the US, caused the manufacturer to pause shipments to one of its more important export markets.
While many countries are now slapped with a 25 per cent or higher tariff, there's now an agreement with the UK, which sees the first 100,000 cars per year from Britain taxed at just 10 per cent. A deal with the EU for a 10 per cent tariff is nearly complete, which will come as a relief to JLR as the Defender is produced in Slovakia.
On top of this, Jaguar's new brand identity and design direction, as previewed by the Type 00 concept, has garnered plenty of attention and caused much gnashing of teeth on the internet. With three production cars set to launch from 2026, it remains to be seen whether the marque's relaunch will be successful, both critically and financially.
Mr Mardell's upcoming departure is the latest in a series of leadership upheavals in the automotive industry this year. In March, Volvo hired its former CEO Håkan Samuelsson to lead it once again, and in May, Stellantis ended its long search for a leader by promoting quality boss Antonio Filosa to the top job.
More dramatically, in June, Renault CEO Luca de Meo quit to head up the luxury conglomerate behind Gucci. His replacement, procurement chief François Provost, was only confirmed a few days ago.
MORE: Everything Land Rover
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
Adrian Mardell, CEO of Jaguar Land Rover (JLR), has decided to retire and leave the automaker after 35 years at the firm.
A spokesperson confirmed the news to Autocar Professional India, and added, "His successor will be announced in due course". It's unclear right now whether the automaker's new CEO will come from inside the company, another automaker or supplier, or from outside the industry altogether.
Mr Mardell became Jaguar Land Rover's interim CEO at the end of 2022 after his predecessor Thierry Bollore quit suddenly "for personal reasons" after just two years in the job. Mr Mardell signed a three year contract in the middle of 2023.
CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal.
Prior to becoming CEO, he worked largely on the financial side, was deputy chief financial officer (CFO) from 2008 before later adding chief transformation officer to his responsibilities, and then becoming CFO in 2019.
During his relatively short time in charge, Mr Mardell trimmed the company's net debt to around zero, and brought the British automaker back into the black, with the company making a £1.8 billion ($3.7 billion) profit in the year to March 2025.
The turnaround has come courtesy of strong sales from the Defender and Range Rover ranges, which have helped the firm achieve a strong profit margin of 8.5 per cent during the previous financial year.
After taking control of JLR, Mr Mardell continued his predecessor's Reimagine plan to turn Jaguar into an Bentley-chasing EV-only brand, and introduce mild hybrid, plug-in hybrid and pure electric drivetrains to Land Rover models.
In April 2023 he renamed the firm JLR, and split Land Rover into three new brands — Defender, Discovery and Range Rover — to sit alongside Jaguar.
Despite the automaker's rosy-looking financials, there are storm clouds on the horizon. Tariffs, which have seemingly been rising and falling on a daily basis in the US, caused the manufacturer to pause shipments to one of its more important export markets.
While many countries are now slapped with a 25 per cent or higher tariff, there's now an agreement with the UK, which sees the first 100,000 cars per year from Britain taxed at just 10 per cent. A deal with the EU for a 10 per cent tariff is nearly complete, which will come as a relief to JLR as the Defender is produced in Slovakia.
On top of this, Jaguar's new brand identity and design direction, as previewed by the Type 00 concept, has garnered plenty of attention and caused much gnashing of teeth on the internet. With three production cars set to launch from 2026, it remains to be seen whether the marque's relaunch will be successful, both critically and financially.
Mr Mardell's upcoming departure is the latest in a series of leadership upheavals in the automotive industry this year. In March, Volvo hired its former CEO Håkan Samuelsson to lead it once again, and in May, Stellantis ended its long search for a leader by promoting quality boss Antonio Filosa to the top job.
More dramatically, in June, Renault CEO Luca de Meo quit to head up the luxury conglomerate behind Gucci. His replacement, procurement chief François Provost, was only confirmed a few days ago.
MORE: Everything Land Rover
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
Adrian Mardell, CEO of Jaguar Land Rover (JLR), has decided to retire and leave the automaker after 35 years at the firm.
A spokesperson confirmed the news to Autocar Professional India, and added, "His successor will be announced in due course". It's unclear right now whether the automaker's new CEO will come from inside the company, another automaker or supplier, or from outside the industry altogether.
Mr Mardell became Jaguar Land Rover's interim CEO at the end of 2022 after his predecessor Thierry Bollore quit suddenly "for personal reasons" after just two years in the job. Mr Mardell signed a three year contract in the middle of 2023.
CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal.
Prior to becoming CEO, he worked largely on the financial side, was deputy chief financial officer (CFO) from 2008 before later adding chief transformation officer to his responsibilities, and then becoming CFO in 2019.
During his relatively short time in charge, Mr Mardell trimmed the company's net debt to around zero, and brought the British automaker back into the black, with the company making a £1.8 billion ($3.7 billion) profit in the year to March 2025.
The turnaround has come courtesy of strong sales from the Defender and Range Rover ranges, which have helped the firm achieve a strong profit margin of 8.5 per cent during the previous financial year.
After taking control of JLR, Mr Mardell continued his predecessor's Reimagine plan to turn Jaguar into an Bentley-chasing EV-only brand, and introduce mild hybrid, plug-in hybrid and pure electric drivetrains to Land Rover models.
In April 2023 he renamed the firm JLR, and split Land Rover into three new brands — Defender, Discovery and Range Rover — to sit alongside Jaguar.
Despite the automaker's rosy-looking financials, there are storm clouds on the horizon. Tariffs, which have seemingly been rising and falling on a daily basis in the US, caused the manufacturer to pause shipments to one of its more important export markets.
While many countries are now slapped with a 25 per cent or higher tariff, there's now an agreement with the UK, which sees the first 100,000 cars per year from Britain taxed at just 10 per cent. A deal with the EU for a 10 per cent tariff is nearly complete, which will come as a relief to JLR as the Defender is produced in Slovakia.
On top of this, Jaguar's new brand identity and design direction, as previewed by the Type 00 concept, has garnered plenty of attention and caused much gnashing of teeth on the internet. With three production cars set to launch from 2026, it remains to be seen whether the marque's relaunch will be successful, both critically and financially.
Mr Mardell's upcoming departure is the latest in a series of leadership upheavals in the automotive industry this year. In March, Volvo hired its former CEO Håkan Samuelsson to lead it once again, and in May, Stellantis ended its long search for a leader by promoting quality boss Antonio Filosa to the top job.
More dramatically, in June, Renault CEO Luca de Meo quit to head up the luxury conglomerate behind Gucci. His replacement, procurement chief François Provost, was only confirmed a few days ago.
MORE: Everything Land Rover
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
Adrian Mardell, CEO of Jaguar Land Rover (JLR), has decided to retire and leave the automaker after 35 years at the firm.
A spokesperson confirmed the news to Autocar Professional India, and added, "His successor will be announced in due course". It's unclear right now whether the automaker's new CEO will come from inside the company, another automaker or supplier, or from outside the industry altogether.
Mr Mardell became Jaguar Land Rover's interim CEO at the end of 2022 after his predecessor Thierry Bollore quit suddenly "for personal reasons" after just two years in the job. Mr Mardell signed a three year contract in the middle of 2023.
CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal.
Prior to becoming CEO, he worked largely on the financial side, was deputy chief financial officer (CFO) from 2008 before later adding chief transformation officer to his responsibilities, and then becoming CFO in 2019.
During his relatively short time in charge, Mr Mardell trimmed the company's net debt to around zero, and brought the British automaker back into the black, with the company making a £1.8 billion ($3.7 billion) profit in the year to March 2025.
The turnaround has come courtesy of strong sales from the Defender and Range Rover ranges, which have helped the firm achieve a strong profit margin of 8.5 per cent during the previous financial year.
After taking control of JLR, Mr Mardell continued his predecessor's Reimagine plan to turn Jaguar into an Bentley-chasing EV-only brand, and introduce mild hybrid, plug-in hybrid and pure electric drivetrains to Land Rover models.
In April 2023 he renamed the firm JLR, and split Land Rover into three new brands — Defender, Discovery and Range Rover — to sit alongside Jaguar.
Despite the automaker's rosy-looking financials, there are storm clouds on the horizon. Tariffs, which have seemingly been rising and falling on a daily basis in the US, caused the manufacturer to pause shipments to one of its more important export markets.
While many countries are now slapped with a 25 per cent or higher tariff, there's now an agreement with the UK, which sees the first 100,000 cars per year from Britain taxed at just 10 per cent. A deal with the EU for a 10 per cent tariff is nearly complete, which will come as a relief to JLR as the Defender is produced in Slovakia.
On top of this, Jaguar's new brand identity and design direction, as previewed by the Type 00 concept, has garnered plenty of attention and caused much gnashing of teeth on the internet. With three production cars set to launch from 2026, it remains to be seen whether the marque's relaunch will be successful, both critically and financially.
Mr Mardell's upcoming departure is the latest in a series of leadership upheavals in the automotive industry this year. In March, Volvo hired its former CEO Håkan Samuelsson to lead it once again, and in May, Stellantis ended its long search for a leader by promoting quality boss Antonio Filosa to the top job.
More dramatically, in June, Renault CEO Luca de Meo quit to head up the luxury conglomerate behind Gucci. His replacement, procurement chief François Provost, was only confirmed a few days ago.
MORE: Everything Land Rover
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

British giant Howden says 70pc of Australian business underinsured
British giant Howden says 70pc of Australian business underinsured

AU Financial Review

time12 hours ago

  • AU Financial Review

British giant Howden says 70pc of Australian business underinsured

Howden's local chief executive, Matt Bacon, says as many as 70 per cent of the country's middle-market businesses are underinsured, a figure that has the British insurer optimistic about growing quickly in Australia. While the company has operated in Australia since 2021, starting local operations soon after the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak, the insurer has gained more recognition recently as the front-of-jersey sponsor of the British and Irish Lions as they toured the country.

'Useless' Hamilton suggests a driver change at Ferrari
'Useless' Hamilton suggests a driver change at Ferrari

Perth Now

time12 hours ago

  • Perth Now

'Useless' Hamilton suggests a driver change at Ferrari

Lewis Hamilton called himself "absolutely useless" and suggested Ferrari should change drivers after he qualified 12th for the Hungarian Grand Prix and teammate Charles Leclerc took pole position. It was a new low in a difficult first season with Ferrari for seven-time Formula One champion Hamilton, who qualified outside the top 10 for the second race in a row. "I'm useless, absolutely useless," Hamilton told British broadcaster Sky Sports. "The team have no problem. You've seen the car's on pole, so they probably need to change driver." Hamilton had said "every time, every time" over the radio after he was eliminated in the second part of qualifying. That signified that "it's me every time", he clarified to Sky later. Hamilton had earlier seemed set to qualify 13th, and was only promoted to 12th after the second part of qualifying had finished. That was because Kimi Antonelli's time was struck out after it was noticed the Mercedes rookie had gone outside the track limits. It was the second week running Hamilton had been frustrated with his qualifying performance. He qualified 18th for the sprint race in Belgium last week after a spin, and 16th for the Grand Prix when one of his times was struck out. Still, Hamilton delivered one of his best drives of the year, cutting through the field on a wet track, and eventually finished seventh. After a move from Mercedes that stunned F1 last year, Hamilton has yet to finish on the podium in a grand prix race with Ferrari, with a best finish of fourth. He did win a sprint race in China in March, but a double disqualification for technical infringements on Hamilton and Leclerc's cars in the Chinese Grand Prix the next day required a rethink of Ferrari's race set-ups. Leclerc is fifth in the standings, only one position ahead of Hamilton, but has five podium finishes in 2005. Last week, Hamilton said it was "crunch time" and revealed he's been holding a series of meetings with Ferrari executives to discuss improvements and ensure he has more of a say in how the team develops its car for the sweeping regulation changes coming in 2026.

Useless Lewis Hamilton reaches new low at Hungarian Grand Prix
Useless Lewis Hamilton reaches new low at Hungarian Grand Prix

Herald Sun

time14 hours ago

  • Herald Sun

Useless Lewis Hamilton reaches new low at Hungarian Grand Prix

Don't miss out on the headlines from F1. Followed categories will be added to My News. A crestfallen Lewis Hamilton declared himself 'useless' after qualifying in 12th position for the Hungarian Grand Prix as Ferrari teammate Charles Leclerc surged to pole position. Seven-time world champion Hamilton exited the session in Q2 with his head down and his helmet on as the 40-year-old retreated to the team's motor home. He was one of several casualties on a day of wet and wild conditions. 'I'm useless,' said the British driver. Fox Sports, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every practice, qualifying session and race in the 2025 FIA Formula One World Championship™ LIVE in 4K. New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1. 'Absolutely useless. The team has no problem. You've seen the car on pole so they probably need to change driver.' While series leader Oscar Piastri and the Australian's McLaren teammate and title rival Lando Norris found themselves unable to cope with changing conditions in the final minutes, Leclerc improved his lap time to snatch his unexpected pole. It was his first at the Hungaroring, his first this year and first since last year's Azerbaijan Grand Prix in Baku as well as the 27th of his career. It was Ferrari's first pole in Hungary since Sebastian Vettel in 2017. Aston Martin's Fernando Alonso was fifth ahead of teammate Lance Stroll, the pair enjoying their best qualifying of the season, with Sauber's Gabriel Bortoleto seventh ahead of Red Bull's four-time champion Max Verstappen and the two Racing Bulls rookies Liam Lawson and Isack Hadjar. Hamilton, meanwhile, was backed to bounce back by four-time champion Verstappen who himself ranted about his Red Bull car and team after struggling to line up eighth on the grid. 'Looking at the whole weekend, I think we're happy to be in Q3 because I've been more outside the top 10 than in it — so, yeah, it's been difficult this whole weekend,' said the Dutch driver. 'No grip, front and rear, and it was the same in qualifying so, for me, it was not really a shock. I just drove to what I already feel the whole weekend.' The 27-year-old Dutchman added that Red Bull — who had left a towel in his cockpit during a pit stop on Friday which led him to throw it out of the car, 24 hours after he had declared he was staying for 2026 — did not yet understand the problems with the car. 'No, clearly not,' he said. 'I mean, otherwise, of course, we would have changed it already, but somehow, this weekend, nothing seems to work.' Last year, Verstappen said he had been quick enough to challenge for pole, but this season, 'from lap one, it just felt off — and we threw the car around a lot and nothing really gave a direction. 'Now, it's just nothing works. You know, it's like just going around in circles and nothing gives you any kind of idea of what to do.' Looking ahead to Sunday's race, he said: 'There may be a few cars in front of me that I can maybe battle with a little bit and, of course, Lewis is still a bit further down the road which, I think, he shouldn't be there right? So, he will come through a bit.' The two multiple champions, who battled so intensely in 2021 when Verstappen claimed his first title after a controversial victory in the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, appear to have found a rapprochement and mutual respect. But Hamilton's heart-on-sleeve vulnerability as he seeks his first Ferrari podium after 13 races this year may soon become a sad ending story if he cannot sort out his qualifying woes. As the record-holder of nine poles and a record eight wins at the Hungaroring, he has to produce a rousing reminder of his best racing days on Sunday, as Verstappen expects. Starting grid for 2025 Hungarian Grand Prix Front row Charles Leclerc (MON/Ferrari), Oscar Piastri (AUS/McLaren) 2nd row Lando Norris (GBR/McLaren), George Russell (GBR/Mercedes) 3rd row Fernando Alonso (ESP/Aston Martin), Lance Stroll (CAN/Aston Martin) 4th row Gabriel Bortoleto (BRA/Sauber), Max Verstappen (NED/Red Bull) 5th row Liam Lawson (NZL/RB), Isack Hadjar (FRA/RB) 6th row Oliver Bearman (GBR/Haas), Lewis Hamilton (GBR/Ferrari) 7th row Carlos Sainz (ESP/Williams), Franco Colapinto (ARG/Alpine) 8th row Kimi Antonelli (ITA/Mercedes), Yuki Tsunoda (JPN/Red Bull) 9th row Pierre Gasly (FRA/Alpine), Esteban Ocon (FRA/Haas) 10th row Nico Hulkenberg (GER/Sauber), Alex Albon (THA/Williams) Originally published as 'I'm useless': Lewis Hamilton reaches new low at Hungarian Grand Prix

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