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Something’s Afoot In China: Young Rich Woman Are Buying Maseratis

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Wolf Richter   www.testosteronepit.com   www.amazon.com/author/wolfrichter

Money-losing Italian supercar maker Maserati, a subsidiary of money-losing Italian run-of-the-mill automaker Fiat, has some challenges. It sold 6,288 cars worldwide in 2012, down 30% from its all-time record in 2008 of 9,000 cars. In order to become profitable, and help its parent become profitable, it wants to force-jump those sales to 50,000 by 2015. Multiplying sales by a factor of eight in three years, just to become profitable? I wonder who did the math.

But it’s not entirely pie in the sky. The number of orders nearly tripled during its year ended July, from the number of units sold in the prior year, though manufacturing bottlenecks have limited actual dealer sales so far.

“The numbers show that the United States is still our largest market globally, but that China has taken the lead for certain models such as the Quattroporte,” Maserati brand chief executive Harald Wester told Reuters in August.

But the company faces a couple of problems in China.

One is the perception that Italian high-end cars are less reliable than their German competitors – a perception Maserati had to fight, Christian Gobber, managing director of Maserati Greater China, told The Wall Street Journal.

Another is crummy service. Maserati doesn’t have much of a service operation in China, and its parts distribution center in Shanghai is run by a third party. “It’s a headache for owners of Maserati; even in Beijing there are few places that provide maintenance service,” explained Michael Ye, a real-estate professional. He liked the Quattroporte’s “fashionable and dynamic design,” but dreading the aftermarket service, he ended up buying a Porsche Cayenne. 

Maserati isn’t blind to the problem. The company is looking into beefing up its parts and service operations as more Maseratis roll over the curb. Eventually customers might see service levels “more in line” with German high-end automakers, but as of yet, Gobber said, a new parts distribution center was still in the “study phase.”

And then there is Chinese President Xi Jinping’s crackdown on lavish spending by government officials as part of a larger crackdown on corruption that he wove into his plan late 2012. He meant business. Sales of supercars, which had soared since the Financial Crisis, suddenly dropped late last year, and have continued to drop, including those of Ferrari and Lamborghini. Corrupt officials simply can no longer afford to show off the fruits of their corruption [read.... Supercars In The US, Japan, and China: How QE And Corruption Boosted Sales].

But Maserati sales in China are booming. The number of dealerships is expected to reach 40 by the end of the first quarter and 60 by the end of 2014. For the first 10 months, the company delivered 2,000 cars, with another 1,000 cars to be delivered by the end of this year, Mr. Gobber said. That’s up from about 900 for the entire year 2012.

China, with 4,938 total orders for the first nine months – the company is having trouble building them – is still Maserati’s second largest market, behind the US, for now, but orders for its hottest model, the Quattroporte, reached 3,956 in China, the most anywhere in the world.

But who the heck are these eager buyers, now that corrupt officials have to think twice before splurging on them?

In the US and Europe, 95% of the buyers are male. The average age is 55. Turns out, the cliché is actually a reality: wealthy guy, going through midlife crisis, ends up buying a supercar, perhaps at the spur of the moment, now that he can afford it.

But not in China. There, the average buyer is 37 years old – and 40% are “very successful young businesswomen who love European craftsmanship and want to be chauffeured in their new Quattroportes,” Maserati CEO Harald Wester told Automotive News Europe.

As is the case with rich Chinese men, these young women don’t want to fight it out themselves in the endless traffic jams. Forget the screeching tires as the light turns green, the heel-and-toe downshift ahead of a turn with no visibility, the sheer thrill of a four-wheel drift through that turn, the rush that comes from blasting out of the turn, V-8 screaming near the red line, the rush of having escaped near-certain death merely by your infinitely honed driving skills and the noble piece of machinery that you paid such a fortune to obtain. They’d rather sit in the back and be chauffeured around.

And those Quattroportes cost a lot of moolah in China where the government slaps on hefty import duties and confiscatory luxury taxes. Entry-level econo-models with a V-6 engine start at the equivalent of $277,000, according to Automotive News Europe. Fully equipped V-8 models retail for about $440,000.

How is Maserati’s Quattroporte different from the models Ferrari and Lamborghini offer? They have to rely on corrupt officials to make their numbers, and when corrupt officials fail to materialize, sales drop. The entry-level Quattroporte is priced below the corruption limit of 2 million yuan, and that may help. But why does it appeal to young rich Chinese women? Maybe it’s the way it looks, maybe it’s the sound of the name in Chinese, or maybe it’s just young rich Chinese women who think they’re going to change the world.

BYD, the name of a Chinese electric vehicle maker, stands for “Build Your Dream.” Maybe that’s what they’re trying to do in China. But here, they’re building a nightmare: broken promises, falsehoods, design flaws... funded by American taxpayers. And they paid Chinese workers in California $1.50 per hour to do it. Read..... American Boondoggle Meets Chinese Methods

 

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Thu, 11/28/2013 - 21:14 | 4198107 MeelionDollerBogus
MeelionDollerBogus's picture

They sure didn't have that knowledge of medicine on arrival - they stole a lot of their ideas FROM the Natives who knew the plants. AND iron smelting wasn't NEEDED to live off the land AND the Chinese who arrived EARLIER than white people ON SHIPS also told them about it. They'd have done it if they needed it. They had the best place to be so perhaps they didn't travel for a reason - avoid inviting genocide EARLIER than it already came.

As for gunpowder it wasn't "brought" and taught, it was used to conquer and I'd dare say the Natives would have been far better off if no one EVER brought it to their lands - you know, the lack of genocide and all.

 

Wed, 11/27/2013 - 16:18 | 4194629 FredFlintstone
FredFlintstone's picture

I used to work for a couple of Chinese, highly educated, but greedy peasants at heart. No imagination, no organizational skills. If they are representative of the cream of the crop then China has no hope. On the other hand...

Wed, 11/27/2013 - 15:34 | 4194430 pashley1411
pashley1411's picture

Like other nations, the Chineese are very good at some things, not so good at others.

Very good at mobilization production, would make Henry Ford proud.   Not very good, at all, at coopting competitors and rivals into the political elite, a nationalistic, xenophobic, people.   So periodically tear themselves apart for reasons of politics and power distribution.

The Chineese could take some lessons from, for example, the Swiss.    But they won't.

  

Wed, 11/27/2013 - 15:30 | 4194409 malek
malek's picture

You might want to recheck your history "knowledge"

Wed, 11/27/2013 - 14:12 | 4194173 TheGardener
TheGardener's picture

Hope you are right. All I see is collusion to get us all on a dollar a day job and corny non-style* products and ways of living take over the world...

*some of the most clever tribes have their Asian roots
revealed by their tastes, cheap bastards on bliss

Wed, 11/27/2013 - 14:05 | 4194161 Vigilante
Vigilante's picture

They make 10 bucks or so these days....minimum

Wed, 11/27/2013 - 15:03 | 4194308 ManWithaPlan
ManWithaPlan's picture

Ya ok I was exaggerating..even so.

Wed, 11/27/2013 - 15:49 | 4194504 CheapBastard
CheapBastard's picture

Wow! Young, wealthy and beautiful....and slim.

Gee.

Wed, 11/27/2013 - 17:13 | 4194871 ajax
ajax's picture

 

 

"....and slim."  Not for long; the more these rare pearls turn to a 'Western' diet especially the shitty American variety they'll all be waddling to their fast cars on diabetic legs.

Mars needs women - so does China.

 

Wed, 11/27/2013 - 18:05 | 4195038 TheGardener
TheGardener's picture

Wrong. Diet doesn`t count.

Chinese not getting fat.

Genes count, but don`t tell , I`ll get banned for racial
reasons.

Chinese no mixed race. Not eternally compromised like others.

Races don`t mix. Ever.

Wed, 11/27/2013 - 18:39 | 4195124 Hulk
Hulk's picture

DUDE !!! You gotz to get out more !!! Chinese women have some of the best big bums out there !!!

Thu, 11/28/2013 - 02:23 | 4196183 lasvegaspersona
lasvegaspersona's picture

be careful with your observations and analyses.

I have carefully, and over a prolonged period studied the back side of Chinese women. here in the USA they have a wonderfully roundish form. On the mainland they are typically flatter, though still glorious. At Walmart.....

Wed, 11/27/2013 - 17:50 | 4194993 MeelionDollerBogus
MeelionDollerBogus's picture

WAIT, you mean McFatass borgers with a side of lard sauce aren't good for ya?

Wed, 11/27/2013 - 17:05 | 4194825 knukles
knukles's picture

The back seat of a Quattroporte is sized for a couple of small blue Tiffany boxes.
Sounds to me like the Official Party Member Thieves cars are for their Mistresses.. er, I mean nieces.

More form over substance

Wed, 11/27/2013 - 18:57 | 4195170 mjcOH1
mjcOH1's picture

"In order to become profitable, and help its parent become profitable, it wants to force-jump those sales to 50,000 by 2015. Multiplying sales by a factor of eight in three years, just to become profitable? I wonder who did the math."

We're losing money on each sale.

But we can make it up on volume.

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