Recent Updates

 

06/12/2025 12:00 AM

WATCH: All-new Apple CarPlay Ultra in action - in an Aston Martin DBX 707

 

06/11/2025 12:00 PM

BMW iX3 Prototype review

 

06/11/2025 12:00 PM

Audi adds plug-in hybrid option to Q5 with 62 miles of electric range

 

06/11/2025 12:00 AM

Land Rover refreshes Discovery Sport again for 2026

 

06/10/2025 12:00 AM

We drive Toyota's overhauled Tesla Model Y fighter

 

06/10/2025 12:00 AM

Toyota Urban Cruiser

 

06/09/2025 12:00 PM

Hydrogen car roll-out in UK stalled as just three pumps in operation

 

06/09/2025 12:00 PM

Is this the most confusing car brand of all time?

 

06/09/2025 12:00 AM

Aston Martin Valkyrie LM revealed as Le Mans racer you can buy

 

06/08/2025 12:00 PM

Don't look back in anger: The wild world of car mags in the 1990s

<<    21   22   23   24   25   >>

EV, Hybrid, Hydrogen, Solar & more 21st century mobility!

< Prev    of 6689   Next >
Morgan: US tariffs won't hurt sales, only growth
Wednesday, Apr 09, 2025 12:00 PM
morgan plus four review 2024 26 front tracking Managing director Matt Hole tells Autocar podcast that tariffs won’t hit jobs at the Malvern firm

Sales of Morgan sports cars will not decline in the US despite the imposition of a 25% tariff on all foreign-built cars imported into the country, according to the marque’s managing director, Matt Hole.

Speaking to Matt Prior and Steve Cropley on Autocar’s My Week in Cars podcast, Hole said: “We gained the homologation in October last year for the Plus Four, so last year we didn't have any US Plus Four volume – it's all additional. And if you look at the 200 cars that we'll add in production this year compared to last year, that entire growth is fundamentally the US market.

“So what we don't have is a hole in the business, but what we're not getting, potentially, is as much growth as we would have liked. We are quite confident that sales of Morgans in the US won't decline significantly, based on the news.”

He conceded that the firm is likely to lose “a few sales per year” but he remained bullish because “you wouldn’t have been able to buy a four-wheeled Morgan new in the US for almost 20 years, so there’s a pent-up demand there”.

He added: “It’s not a car they can go and buy. There isn’t a Morgan in the US. There’s not a Morgan anywhere else in the world. You can’t get this hand-built, hand-crafted car, manufactured in the UK out of an ash frame; you can’t buy that anywhere else.”

Hole (pictured below) said Morgan and its dealers have decided to absorb some of the cost of the tariff so that prices will not increase dramatically for US customers. He described this as “a pragmatic solution”, having worked “really closely with the dealers”.

“We’ve done what we can to reduce the impact on the customers and it will impact us really on reducing the amount of growth that we’d anticipated for the year,” he added.

Jobs at Morgan will not be affected, Hole confirmed.

- To listen to the full interview with Hole on this week's edition of My Week in Cars, where he also discusses the firm's next car, click the box below

< Prev    of 6689   Next >
Leave a Comment
* Name
* Email (will not be published)
*
Click on me to change image  * Enter verification code (Click on the CAPTCHA to refresh the image!)
* - Reqiured fields