The restructuring, part of BAT's Fit2Win programme launched last year, centers on an AI-driven transformation designed to create a more agile, technology-enabled organization. Chief Executive Tadeu Marroco framed the cuts as essential to competitiveness. BAT projects £600 million in annualized incremental savings by 2028, with £500 million targeted by 2027. The company owns Lucky Strike, Dunhill, and the vaping brand Vuse.
Attorneys should monitor this development for several reasons. First, the scale and speed of the restructuring—tied explicitly to AI adoption rather than traditional cost-cutting—may signal a broader pattern in legacy industries facing technological disruption. Second, the outsourcing component raises questions about employment classification and potential labor disputes in multiple jurisdictions as roles transfer to third parties. Third, BAT's pivot away from traditional cigarettes toward alternatives like Vuse vapes and Velo nicotine pouches continues reshaping regulatory exposure across product categories. The market's immediate negative response—BAT shares fell 1.6% following the announcement—suggests investor skepticism about whether the savings justify the execution risk.