British luxury sports car maker Aston Martin
The source said Aston Martin's two-door Cygnet, which was based on the Toyota iQ, had been dropped from the company's line up after it "sold less than 150 units" of the 32,000 pound vehicle in Britain.
When it started production three years ago, Aston said it hoped to sell 4,000 Cygnets a year to environmentally conscious city dwellers thought to be keen on a small, easy to park, luxury vehicle.
Aston Martin has struggled for growth since the economic downturn in 2008 and ratings agency Moody's put its non-investment grade B3 rating under review late last year.
The group posted a 16% fall in full-year profits, blaming global economic uncertainty for a severe slump in sales of high-end vehicles.
Also Read
The carmaker, which is majority owned by Kuwait's Investment Dar and Adeem Investment Co, reported a pretax loss of 24.6 million pounds in the year to December 2012, down from the 21.2 million it posted a year earlier.
Revenues fell 9% to 461.2 million, with global sales volume down to 67,500 units, from a peak of 110,000 units in 2007.
The company, which celebrates its centenary this year, said the "market segment has been severely affected by recession" and highlighted "weakness in European markets and vehicle launches occurring in the fourth quarter."
Earlier this year Aston Martin agreed to team up with Daimler's
Aston Martin, the only global luxury carmaker not attached to a larger manufacturer, hopes the deal will help it better compete with the likes of Volkswagen's