一路 BBS

 找回密码
 注册
搜索
查看: 134|回复: 0
打印 上一主题 下一主题

Ferrari F80 Hypercar

[复制链接]
跳转到指定楼层
楼主
发表于 2-23-2025 10:47:26 | 只看该作者 |只看大图 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式
本帖最后由 choi 于 2-27-2025 13:25 编辑

Stephen Wilmot, Wild Economics Behind Ferrari's Domination of the Luxury Car Market. Its sports cars are impossible to buy. Limited production is making the company the most valuable automaker in Europe.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/the ... car-market-8427dff0

Figure in the window of print:         799   F80 hypercars Ferrari plans to make
                                0       F80 hypercars available for sale. All have been promised to collectors.
My comment:
(a) The first nine paragraphs introduce a new concept, which may be all you need to know from this rticle.
(b) "The name Ferrari traces its origins back to the Italian language, with its roots in the word ferraro, which means blacksmith or iron worker."  Dictionary of American Family Names, by Oxford University Press.
---------------------
With a list price of $3.7 million, Ferrari’s new “hypercar” was revealed to the public in October with a twist: It wasn’t available for sale.

All 799 units of the low-slung, high-haunched F80 model—the most expensive production vehicle in Ferrari’s history—had been promised to top customers like Luc Poirier.

The Montreal real estate entrepreneur already owns 42 Ferraris. He said he felt “lucky” to be allowed to buy yet another.

“To be chosen by Ferrari for one of their hypercars is a true milestone for any collector,” he said.

Money isn’t enough to buy a top-of-the-range Ferrari. You need to be in a long-term relationship with the company.

By leveraging the rabid fandom of its customers through a business model based on uber-scarcity, the storied Italian company is enjoying a new golden age. Following an almost tenfold increase in the stock since its initial public offering almost a decade ago, Ferrari is now worth $90 billion, making it the most valuable car company in Europe—despite delivering just 13,752 vehicles last year.

Volkswagen, which sold more than 9 million cars last year, has a market capitalization that is roughly $40 billion lower. Most of Europe’s auto industry is plagued by a weak domestic market, a costly transition to electric vehicles and new competition from China.

Like Tesla, which became the most valuable U.S. carmaker by attracting a tech-company valuation, Ferrari has won the European prize by channeling similarities with a more reliable peer group: French handbag makers.

“We are not—we are not—an automotive company,” said Chief Executive Officer Benedetto Vigna in a recent interview in Maranello, the city in northern Italy where Ferrari is based. “We are a luxury company that is also doing cars.”

At the time of Ferrari’s IPO, in 2015, many analysts were skeptical that a luxury business model would work for a carmaker.

Former CEO Sergio Marchionne used to draw comparisons with Hermès—a parallel now widely accepted. The French fashion house limits supply of its coveted Birkin handbag, leading to waiting lists at its stores and a huge resale market. Customers buy all manner of other Hermès baubles to move up the list.

Ferrari’s blossoming into a luxury leader has restored the fortunes of founder Enzo Ferrari’s son, Piero Ferrari, and Italy’s Agnelli family, which took control of the company decades ago through its Fiat brand. In the IPO, both families retained stakes that are now worth billions of dollars.

Another group that has profited from its Ferrari investments: savvy collectors. Most cars are famously depreciating assets—including most standard Ferraris. But the value of rare Ferraris has soared in recent years.

A well-preserved example of the previous-generation Ferrari hypercar, dubbed LaFerrari, fetches $3.8 million, according to Hagerty, a specialist auto insurer based in Traverse City, Mich. When the model was released in 2013, in a production run of 499 units, the list price before options was $1.4 million.

LaFerrari was the company’s first roadworthy hybrid, combining a 12-cylinder “V12” engine with an electric motor to deliver what was then Ferrari’s most powerful production car. The F80 builds on that hybrid tradition, which originated on the Formula One racetrack more than 15 years ago, to deliver even more horsepower—1,200, five or six times that of your average family car—through an eight-speed, twin-clutch automatic transmission. With big butterfly doors and a tiny cockpit, the F80 wears its racing heart on its sleeve.

Although Ferrari relies on the potential investment return as well as the emotional appeal of flagship models to keep collectors hooked, it disapproves of what it calls “speculation” in its products.

Last spring, a Houston real-estate broker bought one of Ferrari’s much-hyped Purosangue models, the company’s first four-door vehicle. The list price is close to $460,000 but can approach $1 million with add-on features. When the broker flipped it, the dealership that had sold him the car sued, saying that he was in breach of a contract giving it right of first refusal for 12 months after the sale, according to the plaintiff’s petition. They recently settled without disclosing terms.

Playing Ferrari’s game
Anyone with a few hundred thousand dollars to spare can buy a regular Ferrari as long as they are willing to wait a couple of years. While the standard models aren’t subject to strictly limited runs, the company still lives by Enzo Ferrari’s scarcity dictum: “Ferrari will always deliver one car less than the market demands.”

Limited-edition Ferraris are even scarcer, and you can’t just walk into your local showroom and buy one. These range from special versions of regular models to the design-oriented “Icona” and, most exclusively, once-in-a-decade hypercars like LaFerrari and the F80.

Such models help keep orders flowing for the company’s entire product range even though they account for a fraction of deliveries—just 7% last year. Collectors had on average bought 10 new Ferraris before qualifying to buy LaFerrari or an Icona, which means icon in Italian, according to Hagerty.

Ferrari says that making the cut isn’t just about the number of cars in the garage of a “Ferrarista,” as it calls its fans.

“What we try to measure is: What is your interaction with Ferrari?” said Enrico Galliera, the company’s longtime commercial director.

The process of establishing a formal—albeit secret—hierarchy of clients started when Ferrari set about selling LaFerrari more than a decade ago.

Previously, dealers could choose which clients got which cars, a system that could be abused to reward friends and family. Galliera centralized control in Maranello.

He also noticed that some collectors who hadn’t bought a car recently were on the potential list. That led to the company’s first rule: To get a LaFerrari, customers needed to have bought a Ferrari within the past three years, as well as own a certain number of vehicles.

Since then, the algorithm has grown more sophisticated, Galliera said, to include the events customers attend, whether they take part in Ferrari’s racing program, whether they have had heritage models restored in its classic-car workshop, and many other variables.

“We track everything,” he said.

Some of the company’s erstwhile fans have tired of playing the game.

Jan Otto, who bought his first Ferrari in the 1980s after receiving an inheritance, got frustrated when he failed to “get on the ladder” for the Ferrari Enzo, the hypercar that preceded LaFerrari. The retired entrepreneur, who set up a business in Florida offering supercar test drives, no longer owns the brand.

“Even though I had bought five or six Ferraris and several marquee Ferraris over the decades, I couldn’t find a dealer that was willing to sell me one,” he said. “I hadn’t quite been as vigilant with my purchases or as aggressive as others.”

Others are happy to cycle through standard models to keep the invitations coming.

Roberto de Silvestri, a collector based in Monaco, said he buys standard Ferraris to drive around the famous switchbacks above his home. He typically then trades them for the company’s more exclusive models to keep—and to drive mainly at events like the invitation-only Cavalcade, an annual drive around a scenic part of Europe.

“If it’s a limited edition, of course you have to use it,” he said, “but more carefully.”

Other car brands, particularly those with racing heritages like McLaren, Bugatti and Lamborghini, also create limited-edition models for collectors that come with six- and seven-figure price tags. But those brands haven’t matched the scale of Ferrari’s success at turning a cult following into profit and market value.

When Porsche launched its IPO in 2022, it leaned heavily into comparisons with Ferrari, but the stock has fallen by almost a third since its debut amid challenges in China and a botched electric-vehicle strategy. With 310,718 cars shipped last year, the German sports car maker is too big to keep Ferrari-style wait lists except for a few models.

At the other extreme, smaller supercar brands struggle to deliver as steady a stream of new vehicles as Ferrari, leading to cash crunches. Aston Martin’s shares have lost more than 95% of their value since its 2018 IPO. Bahrain’s sovereign-wealth fund took full control of McLaren last year after a period of heavy losses.

Ferrari’s luxury-sector aspirations face challenges, too. Unlike a maker of timeless handbags, the company has to outdo itself with each new vehicle to please its fans and keep orders flowing.

A tougher luxury market over the past year may have made that harder. Some secondhand Ferraris have fetched bigger discounts than usual following aggressive price increases under Vigna, putting investors on guard.

Yet the stock has revved back to record highs since the company reported results this month. One crucial detail Ferrari disclosed: The order book now covers production through the end of 2026.

To keep its all-important wait list topped up, Ferrari and its dealers work hard to attract buyers for the regular cars even as they bat away interest in ultraexpensive ones.

A favored tactic of James Champion, Ferrari brand manager for H.R. Owen, the carmaker’s London dealership, is asking existing Ferraristi to bring friends or business contacts to events.

“The whole Ferrari ethos,” he said, “is around community and being part of the Ferrari family.”

ferrari1_page-0001.jpg (348.15 KB, 下载次数: 22)

ferrari1_page-0001.jpg
回复

使用道具 举报

您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 注册

本版积分规则

快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表