Waterloo Region Record

As the rich get richer, exotic carmakers are winning

Over five years, high-end brands saw sales rise by 51 per cent

- Kyle Stock

The steering wheel may be slowly going out of style, but no one seems to have told the Ferrari set.

Purchases in this rarefied strata of the auto industry are accelerati­ng far more quickly than those of the pedestrian cars and crossovers catering to the Costco crowd. Now, it’s poised to shift into an even higher sales gear. Over the past five years, the five brands that sell their cars for $200,000 and up — Bentley Motors, Ferrari, Automobili Lamborghin­i, McLaren Automotive, and Rolls-Royce — have collective­ly managed a 51 per cent increase in the annual number of machines sold. Last year, 30,000 of these exotic beasts roared out of dealership­s.

So much for scarcity. During the same period, the global auto market as a whole failed to keep pace, growing by just 23 per cent, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

“I like to keep one from each brand,” said Anthony Tonokaboni, a disposable-glove magnate and self-professed car nut. At the moment, the Los Angeles executive has a 2012 Ferrari 458, a McLaren 650S Le Mans, and, on order, a Porsche GT3. Tonokaboni borrows his business partner’s Bentley on occasion and, in the next year or two, intends to buy a McLaren 720, which starts around $290,000.

Indeed, much of the recent growth at the socioecono­mic peak of the car world has come from McLaren, which has gone from a boutique skunk works hammering together a few hundred cars in 2011 to a polished manufactur­er on par with the most bourgeois Italian brands. In 2016, it sold 3,286 autos, almost as many as Lamborghin­i.

Jolyon Nash, the company’s executive director of global sales and marketing, said the “right number” for the brand is from 4,500 to 5,000 vehicles a year. Customers are taking to the British cars because they are more comfortabl­e and pragmatic than they look. “We find McLaren customers want a car that is the best of both worlds, which is to say a car they can drive to the grocery store in, but then take to the track on weekends,” Nash explained.

Mike Ward has long sold cars from Maserati and Nissan’s Infiniti at his Denver dealership. Six months ago, he added McLaren to the lot and is on pace to sell at least 40 of them annually. “To be honest, there was a little pent-up demand,” he explained. Most of the buyers are in town, but Ward said some are coming from Wyoming and Kansas. “At the moment, there’s plenty of money here, and people like sports cars,” he said.

Elsewhere in the pack, both Ferrari and Lamborghin­i have goosed the pedal a bit on production. As Volkswagen was slogging through its diesel scandal, it quietly more than doubled the number of Lamborghin­is coming out of its factory near Bologna. Meanwhile, Ferrari blew by its selfimpose­d cap of 7,000 vehicles, in part to appease investors since its initial public offering back in October 2015.

Underlying this luxury product push are some very cushy economics. The world simply has far more rich people than it did five years ago. Thanks to a bullish stock market, there are now 226,450 or so “ultra high net worth individual­s” — those with assets of more than $30 million. Those ranks have swelled by 21 per cent since 2012, according to Wealth-X.

And the wealthiest of that bunch have had a few pretty good years of late. Since October 2012, the combined net worth of the world’s richest 100 people has increased 39 per cent, to $2.6 trillion, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index. Apparently, some of them have been shopping Ferrari on the stock market, as well as the dealership.

In a way, it’s odd that the car world’s most opulent brands aren’t selling even more vehicles. Consider the financial gearing in the economy right now: To a billionair­e, buying a $200,000 car — say a 2017 Ferrari California — is mathematic­ally equivalent to the average American household splurging on a $19 martini. It’s a brief intoxicati­on with, at most, a fleeting moment of regret the next morning.

Of course, if these companies make too many quarter-milliondol­lar vehicles, the jet set won’t want them, or at least won’t be willing to pay quite as much for them. A huge part of the value in these carbon-fibre pleasure pods isn’t just the atomized air fresheners and cockpit trim that approximat­es an antique viola. It’s their exclusivit­y.

“If you’re a car company, you have to think about scale and volume and simplifica­tion,” said Gerry Spahn, head of communicat­ions for Rolls-Royce North America. “That’s why we say we’re not a car company, we’re a luxury goods maker.”

The trick is getting people to pay even more for the same number of vehicles. This is why marques such as Ferrari regularly roll out limited edition vehicles, slightly souped up versions of their standard fare that cost three or four times as much. The fancy McLaren that Tonokaboni bought was one of only 50 made to commemorat­e the brand’s Le Mans victory. It cost roughly 40 per cent more than the standard version of the same model.

Rolls-Royce has engineered that sweet little economic motor into its entire product line via its bespoke program. Today, about 80 per cent of Rolls-Royce customers customize their chosen cars with details that cost an additional 20 per cent, on average. After all, if the ceiling of your next car can’t approximat­e the night sky, constellat­ions and all, why not just buy a natty Nissan Maxima?

Lately, customers are asking for Mandarin orange paint and more “arctic white” interiors, according to Spahn. “They’re getting more comfortabl­e with splashing out a little,” he explained. “Honestly, we’ve done seven-figure cars this year.”

Neverthele­ss, the Saville Row suits steering the world’s toniest auto brands have a new trick for maximizing profit: SUVs. They figure General Motors Co.’s Cadillac and Tata Motors Ltd.’s Range Rover shouldn’t be the only choices for a Saudi Arabian oil magnate who wants to go sanding on the weekend. And if the product is different enough, it won’t water down its overall brand. Volkswagen’s Porsche proved this in 2002, when its first utility vehicle, the Cayenne, hit the road and had little effect on the sales performanc­e of its precious sports cars.

Among the ultrapremi­um carmakers, Bentley was the first to the SUV market with its Bentayga. In 2016, its first year on the market, the brand sold almost twice as many of the burly trucks as it intended. Bentley’s overall sales surged by almost seven per cent that year, and half of the machines leaving the dealership were Costco-capable.

Naturally, Ferrari, Lamborghin­i, and Rolls-Royce are all chasing Bentley into the big-rig race. In coming years, all three promise to unveil utility vehicles, even if they don’t refer to them as such. These machines will sit higher and come standard with all-wheel drive and a cavernous cargo bay, where once there was room only for a briefcase. In part because of the new models, IHS Markit expects annual sales of ultrapremi­um vehicles to increase by 19 per cent in the next five years.

“Our customers are commission­ing their new Phantoms today,” Spahn, at Rolls-Royce explained. “And their question is always ‘When is it coming?’”

 ?? MICHAEL NAGLE, BLOOMBERG ?? Ferraris are parked in front of the New York Stock Exchange earlier this month.
MICHAEL NAGLE, BLOOMBERG Ferraris are parked in front of the New York Stock Exchange earlier this month.

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