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JLR ropes in former Renault boss to make the company profitable

Jaguar Land Rover has picked ousted Renault boss Thierry Bollore as its next chief executive, with a mission to return Britain’s biggest carmaker to profit after a big hit from the Covid-19 pandemic.

Bollore took over at Renault in January 2019 after the fall of Carlos Ghosn, but was always viewed a close to the French carmaker’s long-time boss and was pushed out in October when it looked for a fresh start.


Bollore will take over at JLR on September 10, replacing Ralf Speth, whose tenure ends after more than 10 years.

“It will be my privilege to lead this fantastic company through what continues to be the most testing time of our generation,” Bollore said in a statement on Tuesday (28).

JLR was hit this year first by disruption to sales in China and then by lockdowns across Europe and North America as the Covid-19 outbreak spread around the globe.

In 2019, it cut jobs to address tumbling diesel sales, which helped it return to profit. But as the pandemic struck, it slumped to a pretax loss of £422 million ($543 million) for the year ended March 31, 2020.

The company has already taken steps to tackle the crisis, including agreeing a loan facility of around $700 million with lenders in China and further staff reductions.

It is also in talks with the British government over potential support, according to media reports.

Bollore takes over a business that built just over 500,000 cars in 2019-20. He faces a number of tasks, including how to handle the Jaguar brand, which underperforms the Land Rover marque, how quickly to electrify its lineup and a potential hit from Brexit if trade barriers are imposed.

JLR has a partnership with BMW on electrification and parent company Tata Motors recently recommitted to the company.

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Highlights

  • BAT to sell between 7 per cent and entire 15.3 per cent stake in ITC Hotels via block deal.
  • Proceeds will help company achieve target leverage range of 2-2.5x by end of 2026.
  • BAT acquired stake following ITC Hotels' demerger from parent company ITC in January 2025.
British American Tobacco announced on Thursday it plans to sell its stake worth about $776 m (£580 m) in in ITC Hotels through an accelerated bookbuild process, as the tobacco group moves to reduce debt on its balance sheet. BAT intends to offload between 7 percent and its entire 15.3 percent shareholding in the Indian hotel chain.

The company's wholly owned subsidiaries, Tobacco Manufacturers (India) Limited, Myddleton Investment Company Limited and Rothmans International Enterprises Limited will conduct the block deal with institutional investors.

The final number of shares sold will be determined to optimise overall pricing outcome for the group, BAT said. Funds raised from the transaction will help the company transition to its target leverage range of 2-2.5x adjusted net debt to adjusted EBITDA by the end of 2026.

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