Ownership Rolls-Royce grew from the engineering business of
Henry Royce, which was established in 1884 and ten years later began to manufacture
dynamos and electric
cranes.
Charles Rolls established a separate business with Royce in 1904 because Royce had developed a range of cars which Rolls wanted to sell. A corporate owner was incorporated in 1906 with the name
Rolls-Royce Limited. In 1971 the same company, Rolls-Royce Limited, entered voluntary liquidation because it was unable to meet its financial obligations. It remains in existence today, still in liquidation. Its business and assets were bought by the government using a company created for the purpose named Rolls-Royce (1971) Limited.
Rolls-Royce Motors was separated out in 1973. Rolls-Royce (1971) Limited currently carries on the business under the name Rolls-Royce plc. Rolls-Royce plc returned to the stock market in 1987 under the government of
Margaret Thatcher. In 2003 ownership of Rolls-Royce plc was passed to Rolls-Royce Group plc. In the same way, Rolls-Royce Group plc passed ownership on 23 May 2011 to Rolls-Royce Holdings plc. Throughout these corporate changes Rolls-Royce plc has remained the principal trading company.
Growth The 1980s saw the introduction of a policy to offer an engine fitment on a much wider range of civil aircraft types, with the company's engines now powering 17 different airliners (and their variants) compared to
General Electric's 14 and
Pratt & Whitney's 10. The civil engines business represents the company's main area of growth. Between 2010 and 2018, Rolls-Royce invested £11 billion in facilities and
R&D and launched six new civil engines including the
Trent XWB and the
Pearl 15 for the business aviation market. It secured orders for 2,700 engines for
wide-body aircraft and
business jets. It expects to produce over 600 wide-body engines a year and should power over half of the world's wide-body fleet within a few years, up from 22% a decade before. In 2023, Rolls-Royce entered into an agreement for $3.52 million of funding with the
UK Space Agency for the creation of a nuclear reactor on
the moon. The project is intended to provide power for space missions.
Restructuring In 2014 and 2015, Rolls-Royce issued at least four profit warnings due to US defence cuts, a downturn in the offshore oil and gas market and its civil aerospace business, the company initiated job cuts of over 3,000 in response. Rolls-Royce had been selling many of its aero-engines in combination with long-term service contracts. Even though the company booked profits in part with the delivery of the engine, actual payments only came in over time. Between 2003 and 2015, it sold a majority of its engines with these “TotalCare” contracts. The company announced it would no longer be able to move its revenues forward from its long-term service contracts to compensate for its contracts being unprofitable in the early stages after the introduction of
IFRS 15 in 2018 and its profits for 2015 would have been £900m lower than the £1.4bn it reported if it had followed the
new accounting standard. In February 2017, Rolls-Royce posted its largest ever pre-tax loss of £4.6 billion; This included a £4.4 billion
writedown on financial hedges that the company uses to protect itself against currency fluctuations, and a £671 million penalty to settle bribery and corruption charges with the
Serious Fraud Office (SFO), the US Department of Justice, and Brazilian authorities. On 14 June 2018, the company announced a restructuring of the business to create three simpler
decentralised units (
civil aerospace,
defence and
power systems), to rationalise
back office functions and to remove
middle management functions. The
cost savings should amount to £400 million per year by 2020, with an up-front restructuring cost of £500 million. Some 4,600 people are likely to leave the business out of 55,000 employed worldwide, 3,000 job losses from the UK and the rest from elsewhere in the world (15,700 of the employees work in
Derby and 10,300 work elsewhere in the United Kingdom). In August 2018, Rolls-Royce announced it was taking a charge of £554 million to cover faults with some
Trent 1000 engines on
Boeing 787 Dreamliners. Rather than going thousands of hours between inspections, the faults with turbine blades mean the engines currently require inspection every 300 hours of flight. In the same announcement Rolls-Royce, said it would spend £450m fixing faults on the Trent 1000 in 2018, £450m in 2019 and £350m in 2020, with the work complete by 2022. In May 2020, the company announced its intention to cut 20% of its workforce (approximately 9,000 staff) worldwide as a result of the
COVID-19 pandemic. Around 3,000 job losses were expected in the UK, half of them in Derby. In February 2021, Rolls-Royce started talks concerning an operational shutdown of its civil aerospace unit that might last for two weeks due to the impact of Covid-19 and its restrictions. Rolls-Royce announced, in October 2023, that it would cut 2,500 jobs, or 6 per cent of its total workforce. Under CEO Tufan Erginbilgiç Rolls Royce has seen a remarkable turnaround. In July 2025 the share price hit £11 for the first time, from £1 three years ago. Rolls Royce is now the fifth largest company in the FTSE 100 index, valued at £90 billion. Midterm 2027 targets for operating profit were hit two years ahead of estimates, and a jump from £2.6-2.9 billion in 2025 to £3.6-£3.9 billion in 2028 is projected in terms of operating profit per annum. In July the estimates for operating profit for full year 2025 were uprated by £300 million. == Senior leadership ==