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A Porsche 918 Spyder hybrid automobile on display at the Geneva International Motor Show in March. [Adrian Moser / Bloomberg]
Hybrid likely to top Carrera GT as costliest Porsche model
BERLIN - Porsche AG may price the 918 Spyder, which soars to 100 kilometers an hour in 3.2 seconds, at 500,000 euros ($630,000), topping the Carrera GT as its costliest model, according to two people with direct knowledge of the plan.
At least 2,000 individuals have put in non-binding expressions of interest for the supercar, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the information is confidential. The 918 Spyder is one of three hybrid models Porsche presented at the Geneva auto show in March.
Demand for luxury cars is returning as Wall Street firms add jobs for the first time in two years and offer guaranteed payouts to attract top bankers. While Porsche hasn't decided whether and when it will begin production of the model, at that price the 918 Spyder would top the 453,000-euro Carrera GT. Fewer than 1,500 of that model were built between 2003 and 2006.
"The Spyder will become Porsche's new supercar showpiece project," said Stefan Bratzel, director of the Center of Automotive at the University of Applied Sciences in Bergisch-Gladbach, Germany. "It unites Porsche's high-performance engineering with intelligent drive technology."
Porsche, which is merging with Volkswagen AG, needs at least 1,000 sales pledges to approve limited production of the car, development chief Wolfgang Duerheimer said in an April 24 interview. If only half of those who signed up eventually bought the car, Porsche stands to reap 500 million euros in revenue.
A Porsche spokesman declined to comment on the potential price tag and said a decision on production of the model will be made later this year.
The two-seater car accelerates to a top speed of 320 kilometers per hour, relying on a 500-horsepower V8 engine and electric drive-systems allowing the vehicle to run up to 25 kilometers on electric power.
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Frank Biller, an analyst at Landesbank Baden-Wuerttemberg in Stuttgart, where Porsche is based, said the 918 Spyder may enhance the carmaker's environmental credentials and potentially help attract customers to the brand which he says builds "Europe's worst gas guzzlers."
Lamborghini SpA, another luxury brand owned by Volkswagen, introduced its Reventon Roadster supercar at the Frankfurt motor show last September. At 1.1 million euros, the Reventon is the priciest model Lamborghini has ever made.
Fiat SpA's Ferrari unit charges 320,000 euros for the 599 GTO, which the Italian carmaker calls its "fastest road-going model in our history."
Boosting demand for super-luxury cars, average Wall Street bonuses jumped 17 percent to $123,000 last year, New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli said on Feb 23. Morgan Stanley and Citigroup Inc are among banks that are hiring to replenish their ranks, while Nomura Holdings Inc and Jefferies Group Inc have been recruiting talent from larger firms in a bid to increase their standing on Wall Street.
In the first six months, Bayerische Motoren Werke AG's Rolls-Royce almost doubled deliveries. Daimler AG's Mercedes-Benz unit increased sales by 22 percent in the US alone.
Porsche is promoting the 918 Spyder at a time when Wolfsburg, Germany-based VW is seeking to revive the sports-car manufacturer's vehicle lineup. Volkswagen last week named its head of strategy, Matthias Mueller, as chief executive officer of Porsche from Oct 1, replacing Michael Macht, who will head production at the parent company.
Volkswagen CEO Martin Winterkorn said last week Porsche will probably add a new line of smaller Boxster roadsters to its four-model lineup as the manufacturer aims to double sales in the medium term to 150,000 cars and sport-utility vehicles.
Bloomberg News