Currently reading: On the stock market floor with Aston Martin's Andy Palmer
Aston Martin floated its shares on the stock market earlier this month. Steve Cropley joined Aston’s top brass to see it happen

While standing on the first floor of the London Stock Exchange (LSE) with CEO Andy Palmer and 100 Aston Martin faithful, watching the entrance hall clock count down to 8am to begin Aston’s life as a public company, I fell to wondering which of the miracles that have sustained this unique company was the most significant.

Was it that this 105-year-old story began with two men in a London shed setting out to build a better racing car and naming it after their favourite hill climb? Was it that seven times in its history, this company has been flat broke, only to be repeatedly rescued (as others were not) by people who knew its value?

Or was it that this company, worth less than £1 at times in its unprofitable past, was today being invited into London’s sanctum of the solvent having proved its value at north of £4 billion? This last, I decided, was the most remarkable.

The day began at 6.40am in London’s Park Lane, where Palmer and his management team were staying to be ready for the 8am stock debut. A couple of months previously, Aston’s principal shareholders in Italy and Kuwait had signalled their willingness to sell 25% of the company in an initial public offering (IPO), dealing first with big institutions but from 8 October inviting private investors to participate. The last such opportunity ended 28 years ago when Ford bought Jaguar, removing it from the public lists.

Aston 247

Until we climbed into a Mercedes people-carrier for the 10-minute drive across town to the new LSE, in Paternoster Square under the shadow of St Paul’s Cathedral, I hadn’t appreciated the extent to which Aston’s principals were seeing this as a moment for celebration.

Palmer, design director Marek Reichman and CFO Mark Wilson – my companions in the Merc – were weary from business visits to Frankfurt and Paris, but buoyed by this new proof of the value of their past four years’ work. So, it seemed, were the principals of the LSE. They were staging this breakfast with Aston investors, owners, suppliers and customers. Then we’d gather under the clock and watch the first few minutes’ trading on huge screens positioned for moments like this.

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While heading across town, I learned on the qt that the opening price of Aston Martin Lagonda Global Holdings shares would be £19. Previously, we’d only known it would fall in a range between £18.50 and £20.

That would raise £1.08bn for shareholders and value the whole company at £4.33bn (at least six times its value when Ford sold it in 2004). That capitalisation would fall just short of the figure needed to join the prestigious FTSE 100 group of companies, although if it progresses as expected, AML can expect to make the list before long.

Aston 238

We arrived in Paternoster Square with the first rays of sun peeping around corners of buildings and falling on an impressive assemblage of Astons that included the inevitable Bond DB5 and a new Valkyrie, a recording of whose engine soundtrack on Cosworth’s dyno (I had learned in the back of the Merc) would soon appear on Palmer’s Twitter feed at 8am. Reichman described it as the new national anthem...

The breakfast room was packed. The croissants were classy. Familiar Aston faces were everywhere, and I spotted some especially happy-looking individuals who might have been existing investors. They had cause to feel good: they were being handsomely rewarded for their investment (14 years of it, in the case of the Kuwaitis) while retaining 70% of a rapidly expanding company. Palmer was smiling too: his new 0.6% stake is worth £24 million...

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We assembled. The audience joined in the final three-two-one of the countdown. Then there was a loud fanfare to cover an electronic pause while prices appeared on a big trading page. Amid cheers, the first deal was at £19.05 and trading held in that area for a while, but by 8.30am, it had dropped to £18 and most of the audience had melted away.

In interviews, Palmer was coolly observing that as the company’s first IPO had taken 105 years, he wasn’t going to fret about the first half hour.

Wilson reckoned that if the shares ended the first day at around £18.30, he’d be happy. Others referred to Ferrari, which floated at $50 a share in 2015 and fell to $35 before trebling the offer price. At the end of the day, the AML shares were £18.25 – on course – but the next day’s headlines had Aston ‘skidding’ and ‘crashing’, although they did neither thing.

Those at the helm of Aston Martin were expecting it. If you run a public company, everyone knows your business and has an opinion on what you should be doing next. Those in the know say that it’s the beginning of a long game, but no less exciting for that.

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Steve Cropley

Steve Cropley Autocar
Title: Editor-in-chief

Steve Cropley is the oldest of Autocar’s editorial team, or the most experienced if you want to be polite about it. He joined over 30 years ago, and has driven many cars and interviewed many people in half a century in the business. 

Cropley, who regards himself as the magazine’s “long stop”, has seen many changes since Autocar was a print-only affair, but claims that in such a fast moving environment he has little appetite for looking back. 

He has been surprised and delighted by the generous reception afforded the My Week In Cars podcast he makes with long suffering colleague Matt Prior, and calls it the most enjoyable part of his working week.

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Comments
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abkq 19 October 2018

How is this news and worthy

How is this news and worthy of inclusion in a car, rather than a financial, magazine?

paddyb 19 October 2018

One for 'the brave'

One for 'the brave'

Byzantine 19 October 2018

Nothing described as 'classy' is

and certainly not a croissant.