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Aston Martin loss shrinks by a third

London - British sports car maker Aston Martin, famed for supplying James Bond's cars of choice, saw its pre-tax loss fall by a third in 2013 on the back of rising sales and said it had seen a small rebound in demand for high-end autos.

Owned by Kuwaiti and Italian private equity groups, Aston Martin has struggled in recent years, partly because unlike other high-end British brands such as Volkswagen -owned Bentley it is not owned by a wider group capable of supplying investment.

The company, whose DB5 model was driven by Sean Connery's Bond in movies including Thunderball, posted a pre-tax loss of £25.4m for 2013, down a third from the year earlier, on revenue up 12.6% to £519m.

Aston Martin said last year's economic uncertainty had impacted its results and it was unclear when the full effects of a more recent revival would be felt, though there had already been some tentative positive signs in its own market.

"Global economies have continued to show uncertainty during 2013, however the high-luxury sports segment has experienced a small recovery," the report filed on the website of British commercial register Companies House read.

"As with all economic recoveries the precise timing and nature of the recovery is uncertain."
Aston Martin, whose current range includes the Vantage and the DB9, sold 4 200 cars last year, up from 3 800 in 2012.

Attempts to move back into the black are being led by former Nissan executive Andy Palmer, who became chief executive in September after nine leaderless months. However Palmer has plenty of challenges ahead.

In February, Aston was forced to recall 17 590 cars after discovering a Chinese supplier was using counterfeit plastic material in its production of pedals, costing it £1.5m. And a year ago its attempt to tap into the popularity of city cars, the "Cygnet" model, was scrapped after poor sales.

In the United States, Aston is also battling to have the coupe and convertible models of two of its vehicles be exempted for several years from new side-impact safety rules which it said would cause it "substantial economic hardship."

Chief financial officer Hanno Kirner told Reuters in May he expected the marque to make a significant return to profitability after 2016 thanks to a £500m investment programme.


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