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Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Lamborghini Revives Rambo to Win in China

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By Bloomberg News - Feb 22, 2012 6:01 AM GMT+0700
Enlarge image Bentley Vies With New ‘Rambo Lambo’ to Woo Emerging Rich

Ferrari SpA last year added the 260,000-euro FF family car, its largest model, seen here. Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

Feb. 22 (Bloomberg) -- Ian Fletcher, an analyst at IHS Automotive, talks with Bloomberg's Baden Campbell about China's demand for luxury sport-utility vehicles, luxury vehicles supercars in China. Volkswagen AG’s Lamborghini is upending tradition with a new joining Bentley and Maserati in super-sizing their supercars to make more of a mark in China. (Source: Bloomberg)


Volkswagen AG (VOW3)’s Lamborghini is upending tradition with a new sport-utility vehicle, joining Bentley and Maserati in super-sizing their supercars to make more of a mark in China.

“An SUV comes in handy when you need to ferry more passengers and things about, like when you go shopping,” said Bill Liu, 26, who runs a real estate company in Shanghai and owns a Range Rover Evoque and five sports cars, including a $1 million gray Lamborghini Aventador.

To grab another space in Liu’s garage, the exotic Italian sports-car maker will unveil an SUV study at the 2012 Beijing Auto Show in April, nearly two decades after discontinuing the so-called Rambo Lambo military vehicle, said a person familiar with the Sant’Agata Bolognese-based company’s plans. A production version may be available by 2016, said the person, who declined to be identified before the public announcement.

“Chinese customers love their big cars,” Christian Mastro, Lamborghini’s general manager for the Asia-Pacific region, said in a phone interview. “All the brands are making cars more specific for the Chinese market.”

Bentley, which counts Queen Elizabeth II and Paris Hilton as customers, will display its own SUV concept at the International Motor Show in Geneva next month, a person familiar with the matter said. The model may roll into showrooms by 2015 if parent VW approves the project this year, the person said.

The two VW units are playing catch-up. Fiat SpA (F)’s Maserati will start production in 2013 of a Jeep-based SUV, currently called the Kubang, while Ferrari SpA (FERI) last year added the 260,000-euro ($344,000) FF family car, its largest model. The moves reflect a shift east, breaking with traditions developed in Europe in pursuit of a new class of wealthy consumers in countries like China and Russia.

‘Dare Something New’

The cars will be available globally, with China the target market.

“Luxury cars are at the top of the consumption desires of rich Chinese,” said Giuliano Noci, vice rector for the China campus of Milan Polytechnic. Since wealthy Chinese consumers have a limited history with the European brands, “the luxury- car makers can dare something new.”

Sales of ultra-luxury cars may almost double in China to 8,100 vehicles and surge more than five times in Russia to 500 by 2015, according to IHS Automotive. That growth rate compares with a 21 percent increase in Europe to 11,700 cars over the same period. Even with the growth of the Chinese luxury market slowing this year, the automakers see long-term benefits.

The shift by Maserati, Bentley and Lamborghini to SUVs replicates Porsche SE (PAH3)’s strategy. The maker of the 911 sports car departed from its roots when it rolled out the $48,200 Cayenne in 2002. The Stuttgart, Germany-based manufacturer now relies on the SUV for half its deliveries. The model has a waiting list of about a year in China.

Porsche’s Macan

After expanding with the $75,200 Panamera four-door coupe in 2009, Porsche will add the Macan, a compact SUV in 2013.

Deliveries of luxury SUVs, including the Cayenne and Mercedes-Benz (DAI) GL-Class, are forecast to climb 49 percent in China to 265,200 in 2015, almost three times the 18 percent growth in global demand for those vehicles, according to IHS.

“SUVs are just a great interest for a lot of people, because of the driving position -- above everyone else -- and also the road conditions in some fast-growing economies,” said Ian Fletcher, a London-based analyst with IHS.

The segment is also profitable because the additional space and comfort command higher prices, while development costs are kept in check by borrowing technology from other models, said Fletcher. Bentley and Lamborghini can use parts developed by Volkswagen, copying Porsche’s strategy with the Cayenne, while Maserati can rely on Fiat’s resources.

Lamborghini’s ‘Surprise’

Lamborghini will have “something to show: at the Beijing auto fair, said Mastro, declining to elaborate. The Italian supercar maker discontinued the boxy LM002 SUV, the Rambo Lambo, in 1993 after a failed effort to make military vehicles.

‘‘With an SUV, there is a great chance in the emerging markets,’’ said Rolf Frech, head of engineering at Bentley, who moved from Porsche in November after 28 years. ‘‘The basis is to make Bentley a sustainable business case, which is the same as we did at Porsche,’’ which had focused on sports cars before the Cayenne.

Bentley plans to position its SUV above the top-of-line Cayenne Turbo, with a price tag of more than $140,000, Bentley chief Wolfgang Duerheimer said in January. The Crewe, England- based company is also expanding its lineup by adding a eight- cylinder engine to the Continental coupe. Bentley says the down- sized model is aimed at a younger, edgier clientele. It starts at 136,000 euros, compared with 154,600 for the existing 12- cylinder version.

Traditionalist View

Still, the expansion into SUVs doesn’t appeal to traditionalists like Ronald Venn, 67, a three-time Bentley owner from London.

‘‘I wouldn’t be interested in an SUV from Bentley -- I’d go to Range Rover,” said Venn, who runs a security equipment supply business. “They’d screw up their image for me. I go to Bentley for a luxury limousine. I just love the comfort of them, the power, and the ostentatiousness of the engine.”

Chinese customers may have a different approach. Liu, who paid twice as much for his Aventador as a U.S. buyer would because of China’s import taxes, is ready for something new.

“I would definitely consider such a vehicle, but the car has to be practical and not exorbitantly priced,” he said.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Tommaso Ebhardt in Milan at tebhardt@bloomberg.net; Alex Webb in Frankfurt at awebb25@bloomberg.net; Liza Lin in Shanghai at llin15@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Chad Thomas at cthomas16@bloomberg.net; Young-Sam Cho at ycho2@bloomberg.net



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