The Mercury News

Volkswagen sheds expensive sport-car maker Bugatti

- By Jack Ewing

Volkswagen on Monday said it was giving up control of Bugatti, a storied automaker whose absurdly expensive hypercars are worshipped by aficionado­s but seemed incongruou­s at a company better known for economical Golfs and Passats.

Bugatti, whose Chiron model starts at close to $3 million, will become part of a joint venture between Volkswagen’s Porsche unit and Rimac, a young Croatian company that has made a name for itself doing design and engineerin­g projects for large carmakers.

Rimac will own 55% of the joint venture, known as Bugatti-Rimac, and Porsche will own 45%. Mate Rimac, the 33-year-old founder of Rimac, will be CEO. The companies did not disclose financial terms.

The deal undoes a major legacy of Ferdinand Piech, who dominated Volkswagen for two decades and built the company into a global empire. Volkswagen’s purchase of Bugatti out of bankruptcy in 1998, long before it owned Porsche,

was widely seen as an indulgence by Piech with questionab­le business logic. By his own account, Piech, then-CEO of Volkswagen, got the idea after one of his sons admired a model of a vintage Bugatti in a souvenir shop while the family was vacationin­g in Spain.

Porsche CEO Oliver Blume acknowledg­ed Monday that the deal removes a distractio­n for Volkswagen and allows the company to focus on more important tasks. Those include shifting to production of electric vehicles and overcoming the effects of an emissions scandal.

Despite price tags that can top $10 million for limited-edition models and despite celebrity owners such as Portuguese soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo and entertaine­r Jay Leno, Bugatti chronicall­y lost money.

“It’s the only way to develop Bugatti for a profitable future,” Lutz Meschke, chief financial officer of Porsche, said of the joint venture.

But the venture allows Porsche to keep its hand in the business and benefit from technologi­cal innovation­s, Blume said. Porsche is itself a storied sports car brand, but many of its models sell for less than $100,000 and it has been a steady moneymaker for Volkswagen.

Rimac said Bugatti will begin shifting to electric vehicles but continue to sell cars with internal combustion engines for years to come. Bugatti’s current flagship is the Chiron, which is equipped with a 16-cylinder, 1,500-horsepower gasoline engine and has a top speed of 300 mph.

Rimac founded the company that bears his name in 2009 with the idea of building a sports car, he said Monday. The firm became a supplier of technology to bigger carmakers in order to survive. Porsche is also a shareholde­r in Rimac, as is Hyundai.

So far, Rimac has sold only a few prototypes, but is preparing to begin selling the Nevera, an electric sports car that will be able to go from zero to 60 mph in less than 2 seconds.

Future Bugattis will be completely different vehicles from the Nevera, Rimac said, with more emphasis on features such as the sumptuous leather interiors for which Bugattis are known. “We haven’t figured everything out ourselves,” he said.

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