Select Page
How long can Porsche Exclusivity survive?

How long can Porsche Exclusivity survive?

Porsche has announced worldwide sales of 225,000 cars during 2015, beating the previous year’s all-time record by just under twenty percent. As with all Porsche sales releases, the opening gambit is that Porsche continues to “focus completely on building highly emotional sports cars” before confirming the Macan SUV as the biggest seller, with the Cayenne SUV in a close second place.

“The figures reflect the pulling power of our brand as well as the appeal of our products which we have launched on the market in the past few years,” says Dr. Oliver Blume, Porsche CEO, who then says that sales are not the primary measure of Porsche’s success. “What is much more important for us are customer enthusiasm, return on sales and secure jobs.”

Last year’s most enthusiastic customers were in China, where 58,000 car buyers committed to a new vehicle bearing the Porsche badge. China outperformed the USA by some 6,500 deals: the country was up 24% year-on-year, while America managed a 10% rise in the same period. Germany accounted for nearly 29,000 cars all on its own, part of a 24% rise in European sales.

Prolific Porsche Production

Think about 225,000 new Porsches hitting the roads in 2015. Add at least the same again in 2016 and the 190,000 cars Porsche delivered in 2014: a total of almost 650,000 cars sold in thirty-six months. Consider the brand’s future as part of the wider Volkswagen group strategy to rationalise its products and implement billions of Euros in platform sharing economies, driving higher unit margins as it regains market share and ask yourself just how long that historic badge can stay any way exclusive.

Porsche sold 32,000 911s in 2015: up 4% on 2014. Boxster/Cayman recorded a mere 1% increase. The 911 may go racing, but how long can the brand credibly claim that its primary business is sports car manufacture when five of every six cars on Porsche delivery trucks has three rear seat belts? When does the sports car connection lose relevance?

Do sports car buyers want Porsches?

Assuming sports cars still have a place in the world, has Porsche got what sports car buyers want? The cheapest Porsche sports car is a basic Boxster, with UK prices starting at £39,500 for a car without options. Porsche has reportedly abandoned plans to build a baby Boxster so there is no sign of a modern day 914. The decision has to be connected to brand strategy, as no doubt there is a market for a smaller Porsche roadster priced circa £30k and development would not cost a fortune. It is hard to believe that a compact roadster product line would have as negative an affect on long term 911 sales as 200,000 Audi-derived Porsche SUVs rolling off the lines every twelve months.

I enjoyed driving a fully loaded (Volkswagen Group) Seat Ibiza 1.2 TSI for two weeks in Spain last month. The driving position was perfect, controls all very slick and, try as I might, I could not get the sporty turbocharged hatchback to drink fuel at scary mpg. Put the same chassis & drivetrain in a roadster chassis with a sensible price tag and you have a capable MX5 competitor.

Whereas independent Porsche might have gone down the baby Boxster route, no one at Volkswagen is going to endorse a turbocharged 1.2-litre Porsche sports car. So buyers are left with the choice of spending £40k for the most basic Boxster versus MX5s starting at less than £20k. The Boxster has build quality in its favour, but the fun-to-drive Mazda is also well built and the latest model has just been lightened by more than 100 kilograms as part of a push for market dominance. A Seat Turbo roadster might take the fight to Mazda, but upmarket Porsche can’t attack the MX.

911: overpriced and overplastic

Over Christmas, I visited Porsche’s 991 online configurator and ended up with an orange 911 Carrera costing £85k with a reasonable but not excessive spec. Bearing previous 991 drives in mind and imagining the likelihood of ordering an £85k Carrera had I the means to do so, I couldn’t envision an enduring sense of occasion with a new VW-diluted 991 parked on the driveway.

Road testers rave about the latest 911, but how many of them will ever buy one brand new? And how much weight does press opinion truly carry in real-world buying decisions? Ownership costs have to make sense, as does brand positioning. Most new car buyers have no interest in WEC or motorsport activities, so much brand perception comes down to what people see on the roads. When mass public consciousness of Porsche’s place in the world can be summed up as a volume manufacturer of expensive SUVs, it is hard to see overwhelming positives for the sports car lines. I’m not saying they’re doomed, but there has to be a downside.

RIP David Bowie

David Bowie died this morning, so BBC 6 Music has been celebrating his remarkable impact all day. I once read an interview where Bowie spoke about meeting some kids who congratulated him on a passable cover version of Nirvana’s “Man who Sold the World”. “Fuck off you little tossers,” smiled Bowie, who wrote the song in 1970 but ended up reminding audiences of this when he performed it, after Nirvana’s cover became the more well known version amongst a new generation. Don’t mess with legends without doing your homework.

Porsche delivers 200,000 cars in 2015

Porsche delivers 200,000 cars in 2015

For the first time in its history, Porsche AG has delivered more than 200,000 cars in a single production year with still one full month remaining to the end of 2015.

A total of 209,894 cars were delivered to the end of November 2015: 24% up on the same period last year. Cayenne was November’s big winner: almost 40% on the same month last year with 6,500 models delivered. Cayenne has also beat Macan this year: a total of 68,000 cars delivered between January and November 2015.

China has been the biggest market so far in 2015, no doubt a surprise to those who have been talking that corner down. Chinese Porsche buyers took delivery of 54,302 cars through the first eleven months of 2015: up 34% on the same period last year.

Despite selling almost ten percent more cars than last year, the US continues to trail China’s success by some 6,500 cars: twelve percent of the Chinese total. Europe was up thirty percent for the year, with 70,500 cars sold and delivered.

Porsche wins 2015 World Endurance Championship

Porsche wins 2015 World Endurance Championship

Porsche has won the World Endurance Championship constructors’ title. Winning the Shanghai WEC race gave the team 308 points, putting Porsche beyond reach of Audi (238 points) and Toyota (137 points) with one WEC round remaining.

The win is Porsche’s 13th World Championship title as a constructor in endurance racing, and the first since 1986. Between 1964 and 1986 Porsche took twelve constructors’ titles in the Sports Car World Championship. Here’s Porsche’s race summary.

Porsche at WEC Shanghai

The seventh of eight rounds of the FIA World Endurance Championship (WEC) was held as a six-hour race at the Formula One circuit of Shanghai. The winning drivers who shared the Porsche prototype were Timo Bernhard (Germany), Brendon Hartley (New Zealand) and former Formula One driver Mark Webber from Australia. The sister Porsche 919 Hybrid of Romain Dumas (France), Neel Jani (Switzerland) and Marc Lieb (Germany) crossed the finish line just behind them and made it the fourth one-two victory this season for Le Mans record winners Porsche.

Porsche 919 LMP1 Hybrid wins WEC title

This year’s double victory at the 24 Hours of Le Mans on June 14 and the world championship title came a lot earlier than expected. Porsche only returned to top-level motorsports in 2014, when it was the only German car manufacturer and the only sports car manufacturer worldwide who had three premium plug-in-hybrid cars on the market (918 Spyder, Cayenne, Panamera). Porsche was attracted by the WEC’s revolutionary efficiency regulations, which requires high performance hybrid technology from the manufacturers’ prototypes and strictly limits their energy consumption. Within a very short period of time, an entirely new infrastructure at Porsche’s R&D centre in Weissach was set up and a team of 230 experts employed.

I haven’t followed all of this year’s WEC as been up to my eyes in building a garage and trying to keep the builders paid, but this is a great win for Porsche and the manufacturer has exciting plans for 2016. I have been following those stories: we’ll talk about them soon.

Rare 356 Porsche Exhibition at Hamburg Prototyp Museum

Rare 356 Porsche Exhibition at Hamburg Prototyp Museum

I love a good art gallery or museum exhibition. Hamburg’s Prototyp Museum has just announced something special for fans of the Porsche 356 and early Porsche heritage: the ‘Very Important Porsche 356’ exhibition from November 13, 2015.

Twelve of the most important Porsche 356s will be shown at the wonderful Hamburg Automuseum, including the oldest-known German manufactured 356. Of course, an Austrian-built Gmünd Coupe also forms part of the exhibition, as well as two early pre-Stuttgart Convertibles: a 1949 356/2 Beutler Convertible and a 356/2 Keibl Convertible from the same year.

Three Gmünd Porsche 356s at Hamburg Prototyp Museum

While the museum has gathered twelve 356s in total for this exhibition, the trio of early Porsche 356s alone should attract a number of visitors, keen to see three early Gmünd-built cars in one place. I can’t think of anywhere these three rare cars would have been gathered together at once in the last five years, so new arrivals to the world of classic Porsche will find these cars fascinating.

For my money, nothing sings more of undiluted Porsche DNA than these very early 356s, pieced together by hand in a converted Austrian sawmill, nestled in the foothills of the Central Eastern Alps. Ferry Porsche wasted no time after the end of the war in making his dream of Porsche-produced sports cars a reality. Every ounce of Ferry’s passion – a passion that was shared by the great team around him – sings from the aluminium bodywork of each of these cars in a hymn of devout inspiration.

Porsche 356 Beutler Convertible 1949

Porsche 356 Gmund Styling

Once Porsche 356 production moved to Stuttgart in 1950, the bodies were stamped out in steel and much of that precious Gmünd styling was lost including the low, narrow roofline and the careful detailing through the front end. Photos never do these cars justice: you have to stand beside a Gmünd car to experience all of what they communicate. To me, the 356/2 Keibl Convertible built by Karosseriefabrik Ferdinand Keibl in Vienna (top pic) is one of the most beautiful road cars ever built: small wonder that Ferry was also a great admirer, and bought the only surviving example back for his personal collection.

Perhaps the most surprising part of this exhibition to those unfamilar with the very first cars produced by the genius Ferry Porsche will be the colour and sharpness of an early 356. We’re so conditioned to seeing these Porsches in grainy old black and white photos, that we expect the reality to be monochrome paintwork and workaday VW plastic on the dashboard, and tend to ignore opportunities to get close to these cars as a result.

I am always quite taken aback by the joy with which these cars were built and finished. Some of the colours are simply incredible and the shapeliness of the early 356s is quite honestly mesmerising from almost every angle. The crispness of a coachbuilt convertible top removes any thought that new cars rule for quality and the elegant palette of colours across bodywork, trim and soft tops is just beautiful. I encourage you to go along to Hamburg for a day while the exhibition is open from November 13 to March 27, 2016. Entry is only €13.50 and the museum is well worth the journey.

The cars of the Very Important Porsche 356 exhibition:

  • 1949 Porsche 356/2 Beutler Convertible
  • 1949 Porsche 356/2 Keibl Convertible
  • 1949 Porsche 356/2 Gmünd Coupe
  • 1950 Porsche 356 Chassis 5006
  • 1951 Porsche 356 Gläser Convertible
  • 1952 Porsche 356 America Roadster
  • 1953 Porsche 356 1500 S USA de Luxe Convertible
  • 1957 Porsche 356 A 1500 Carrera GT Speedster
  • 1960 Porsche 356 B 1600 Carrera GTL Abarth
  • 1963 Porsche 356 B 2000 GS-GT „Dreikantschaber“
  • 1964 Porsche 356 C 2000 GS Carrera 2
  • 1964 Porsche 356 C 1600 SC Polizei Convertible
“We’ll cut everything not essential” – Matthias Müller

“We’ll cut everything not essential” – Matthias Müller

As Volkswagen owners worldwide begin receiving their recall paperwork for the emissions débacle, the new CEO Matthias Müller has given the clearest indication yet of the scale of changes that are coming at Volkswagen. In a speech to 20,000 Volkswagen employees at Wolfsburg’s Hall 11, Müller made it clear that the Volkswagen of the future would be a very different organisation.

“Apart from the enormous financial damage which it is still not possible to quantify as of today,” said the Chairman, “this crisis is first and foremost a crisis of confidence. Our most important task will be to win back the trust we have lost with our customers, partners, investors and the general public. Only when everything has been put on the table, when no single stone has been left unturned, only then will people begin to trust us again.”

Volkswagen shares plummet by $60 Billion

Meanwhile, Volkswagen shares continue to nosedive, with a staggering $60 billion now wiped off the company’s value since the scandal broke. Even more staggering is the number of industry commentators who continue to insist that this is a fuss about nothing – either they have an errant line of code in their programming or this is costing VW PRs more than a few VIP perks. As more than half the value of Volkswagen AG has now evaporated, Müller is right to let his people and the global stock markets know that cuts are coming.

Suzuki Motor Company is the most recent bulk shareholder to abandon ship: Porsche SE buying back a 1.5% Volkswagen shareholding owned by the Japanese firm. As Porsche spends on share buybacks, ex-Porsche CEO Müller looks to slice billions off Volkswagen’s costs. “It is not possible to quantify the commercial and financial implications at present. That is why we have initiated a further critical review of all planned investments. Anything that is not absolutely necessary will be cancelled or postponed. And it is why we will be intensifying the efficiency program. To be perfectly frank: this will not be a painless process.”

Credit Suisse estimates $87 Billion Emission Scandal Cost

A number of analysts have put their best interns on the job that Volkswagen says is currently impossible: quantifying the scale of the financial implications. Possibly the best/worst one was a Credit Suisse report estimating the total cost (not including long term damage to reputation) at somewhere between $25 billion and $87 billion, with shares dropping another 20%. Volkswagen insists the numbers are nonsense, and the top estimate does seem completely ridiculous, but the lowest number is at least what it will run to, including settling the lawsuits and discounting replacement car prices for those affected. This will put a huge strain on Volswagen’s finances.

No doubt the shares will bounce back from wherever they bottom out, but another 20% would take Volkswagen to a third of its pre-dieselgate value. The VW emissions affair is certainly not a fuss over nothing and it is very relevant to the future of Porsche.

Tuthill Porsche wins WRC R-GT Cup

Tuthill Porsche wins WRC R-GT Cup

I’ve been working on the legendary Tour de Corse rally all weekend, where the Tuthill Porsche team has just won its class and the inaugural R-GT Cup with the exciting Porsche 997 R-GT rally car.

Victory on Tour de Corse – Round 11 of the 2015 World Rally Championship and the fourth round of the FIA R-GT Cup – is the second win for Tuthill’s Porsche R-GT car this season, following a proper result on January’s Monte Carlo Rally, opening round of WRC 2015. Four-time WRC winner, François Delecour, has driven the R-GT Porsche all season, but brought a new driving partner to Corsica in the form of Sabrina de Castelli: a Tour de Corse veteran with numerous class wins and podiums to her credit.

Pairing Frenchman Delecour’s experience on the Tour de Corse, including a win in 1993, with de Castelli’s considerable expertise on this historic WRC event proved an unbeatable combination on a Tour de Corse blighted by the worst weather seen on the Mediterranean island for more than thirty years. Torrential rain washed away some rally roads and led to multiple stage cancellations.

Tuthill Porsche Delecour Tour de Corse 2

François Delecour Porsche wins WRC Tour de Corse

Starting the second day of the rally just twelve seconds behind season-long R-GT rival, Romain Dumas, Delecour was prepared for the slippery first stage of the day. As Dumas suffered a puncture and then car damage in the treacherous conditions, Delecour rocketed past to seize the R-GT lead. Dumas failed to arrive at the following stage, later announcing retirement from the Tour de Corse rally.

Losing Dumas did not hand Delecour a guaranteed win, as the Corsican landscape with its unforgiving stone walls, sheer rock faces and 500-metre vertical drops can always bite back. The Tuthill Porsche crew and its drivers still had to get the car to the finish, which it did with delight on lunchtime on Sunday.

Tuthill Porsche Tour de Corse Delecour 11

A New Chapter in Porsche Rally Heritage

“Rallying is not about getting one thing right,” said our friend Richard Tuthill at the end. “This is a sport where any one weakness will damage a team’s ability to compete and to finish. Just as in the historic rallies where we earned our reputation and continue to excel, it is our team’s ability to build Porsche 911s that perform and finish rallies that has really made the difference.

“We fought a long battle to bring GT cars back to WRC rallying, and our first season with the Porsche R-GT has been much harder work than anyone expected. Winning the FIA R-GT title before the last round is satisfying and it is also terrific to add Tour de Corse to our team’s list of victories. This rally looms large in Porsche folklore, after Jean-Luc Therier’s memorable win here three decades ago. We’re proud to have written an entirely new chapter in Porsche rally heritage.”

Tuthill Porsche Delecour Tour de Corse 5

Delecour’s Dream of WRC Porsche wins

“What a place to win a rally and the FIA Cup,” said François Delecour. “My dream was to bring Porsche back to the WRC and let fans of modern WRC see how exciting rally used to be. This year with Tuthill Porsche has been a huge challenge, but the team is really born to rally, so we fit together perfectly.

“Tour de Corse is magical: everything a great rally should be. It is fast, spectacular, beautiful and completely unforgettable, just like our Porsche R-GT. Thanks to Richard Tuthill and his hard-working team, my co-drivers Dominique and Sabrina and all the great fans of rallying who have made this year one of my favourites. I am so happy to win this: it is just a dream come true.”

Tuthill Porsche Tour de Corse Delecour 7

The final round of FIA R-GT 2015 is ERC Rallye du Valais at the end of October. After that, the Porsche team heads for Kenya and the Safari Classic Rally. A busy end of year for all of us rally fans!