Can you say Works Council?The German carmakers all have a problem with high fixed costs, particularly labor costs. Add the costs to transition to EV, which may now be stranded, and and subpar results in China and it will be challenging.
Can you say Works Council?The German carmakers all have a problem with high fixed costs, particularly labor costs. Add the costs to transition to EV, which may now be stranded, and and subpar results in China and it will be challenging.
This will be a challenge for all the Euro makers. BMW and MB have done a better job balancing the portfolio of products to get the right mix of price and volume. VW struggles because they cannot get the same margins. And Stellantis is dealing with similar issues - high fixed costs in Europe, EV transition cost allocation, and a prior CEO who was pretty tone deaf with respect to US consumers and managed to screw up a couple of cash cow brands. The new crew there will get it straightened out but it will take time.Can you say Works Council?
Can’t be all bad. They have WEC and IMSA both with the 963. If times were tough those programs would be axed.
I would understand it if they were a standalone company, but being that VAG has VW for mainstream buyers and Audi for premium offerings, I never understood the need for Porsche to do anything but the 911 and Boxster/Cayman.
Mostly agree...but, more sales at SUV margins....plus you get new traffic into the showroom. I remember when the Panamera first came out. I parked our 911 next to one and I chatted with the owner and remarking on the shape said "...almost looks like the engine is in back", to which the owner said "It is in the front" and gave me a quizzical look. It dawned on me that he had no familiarity with Porsche's heritage, but his new to the brand purchase is funding development of the ones we like...same w/ SUV's.I never understood why Porsche so happily jumped on the SUV bandwagon.
Yeah, my hotel is next to places where your $5m waterfront still only gets you one parking spot - several of them hold a Macan …More sales at SUV margins....plus you get new traffic into the showroom. I remember when the Panamera first came out. I parked our 911 next to one and I chatted with the owner and remarking on the shape said "...almost looks like the engine is in back", to which the owner said "It is in the front" and gave me a quizzical look. It dawned on me that he had no familiarity with Porsche's heritage, but his new to the brand purchase is funding development of the ones we like...same w/ SUV's.
A long time ago I had a discussion with a GM marketing exec about the Cadillac wagon. He said something to the effect of; we build a few (relatively), we sell them all. A certain part of our customer base wants a wagon and we want to keep them in our showrooms.
The Macan S is a sweet vehicle, I really like it, probably wouldn't own one, but glad to let their buyers fund other Porsche products.
Porsche least reliable (link)Amongst whom? Seriously.
I've been in the Porsche world for a very long time and while P'cars certainly have their faults, "being unreliable and requiring constant repairs...." is not one of them. Not many owners I know feel that way, I have been around a lot over the years.
People who complain about the problems with their six figure miles Boxster they bought from its fifth owner who maintained it with "just like OEM" Amazon/Ebay parts' opinions don't count. They aren't buying new.
OTH, MB and BMW built in America for years …Per Autoblog 07/24/25
Bumpy road ahead for a lot of automakers. A lot of uncertainty due to tariffs, EV's and changing geopolitical issues.
"Porsche has warned employees that its current business model “no longer works,” as the company braces for cost-cutting talks amid falling profits, China struggles, and EV headwinds.
CEO Oliver Blume told employees that the company’s traditional business model is no longer sustainable in the current climate. “Our business model, which has served us well for many decades, no longer works in its current form,” Blume said.
This sobering admission sets the tone for a forthcoming round of cost-cutting talks, with Porsche now preparing for a serious overhaul of its production structure, spending priorities, and long-term strategy. Labor negotiations are expected to begin later this year — and if the last round of restructuring is anything to go by, the fallout could be substantial.
North America Up, China Down
To the casual observer, this warning might seem surprising. After all, Porsche’s North American division just posted its best-ever half-year sales figures. Deliveries rose 11.4% year-over-year, with 38,696 vehicles shifted in just six months. CEO of Porsche Cars North America, Timo Resch, credited the growth to customer enthusiasm and the strength of the dealer network.
But the bigger picture is far less rosy. Globally, Porsche is still down 8% on sales in Q1, and much of that downturn is being driven by a stunning 42% sales drop in China. The world’s largest car market, once a reliable growth engine for the German automaker, has become a liability amid rising protectionism, weak consumer confidence, and a fiercely competitive EV sector.
Blume hasn’t minced words about the road ahead. Porsche is expected to move away from its prior goal of 80% electric vehicle sales by 2030, and more investment will be reallocated to hybrid and combustion powertrains. It’s a dramatic pivot for a brand that only a year ago appeared all-in on electrification.
Porsche’s warning comes at a pivotal moment not just for the company, but for the industry at large. With global demand for EVs cooling and trade politics turning up the heat, even luxury stalwarts aren’t immune to the turbulence. Porsche’s leadership says further announcements about structural changes will follow later this year."
Not "probably" - it is.It's probably over for ICE vehicles in China. All they mean is China needs to import more crude oil to power them. Nope.
Motorbiscuit and Carscoops, "studies" utilizing data from an aftermarket warranty company. The Motorbiscuit article appears especially professional, thorough and well researched, especially the photographs. OK.....seem like legit sources
Probably not as there will always be customers in that segment, certainly not for 911's (or Ferrari, Mclaren, $200k+), but it is very hard for a company to survive just on that market segment and that is where Porsche's troubles lieThe market for $200,000 cars must have started drying up.
What is he saying here?Mr. Lee: I faced this problem myself. Every year, our unions and the Labour Department subsidize trips to China and India. We tell the participants: Don't just look at the Great Wall but go to the factories and ask, "What are you paid?" What hours do you work?" And they come back shell-shocked.
Labor costs are too high; labor is too powerful; labor is fat around the middle.What is he saying here?