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So Tesla, FCA, and Ferrari are the only automakers to have IPO'd in US markets since Ford in 1956.
In other words, car-company IPOs are about as rare as black swans,
four-leaf clovers, and appearances by the Cubs in the World Series.
Tesla's offering started out
modest with shares priced at $17. But in the last few years, the stock
has blasted to epic levels, at one point nearing $300 per share in 2014.
Investors who bought early are sitting on a 1,000%-plus return.
Ferrari's IPO was richer and
flashier, with the stock debuting at $52 and jumping to $60 on the first
day of trading before settling. Still, you might look at both
automakers — with their cars that sell for over $100,000 (in Ferrari's
case, well over $100,000) and can accelerate from zero to 60
with impressive velocities — and see affinities. And there are a few.
But when you get down to it, Tesla is nothing like Ferrari. And it
doesn't want to be anything like Ferrari.
A tale of 2 cars
(Hollis Johnson) The Tesla Model S P90D.
Ferrari automobiles are all supposed to have three things in common: be sexy, be fast, and be expensive. Ideally, they're also red, but Ferrari doesn't stick to this. There's always a core Ferrari. For about the past decade, it's been the 458 sports car. Pretty soon, it will be the 488 GTB. The loud and powerful engine is behind the driver's head, there are two doors, and the design is dramatic and flamboyant without being tasteless. The asking price is about $300,000.
Tesla hasn't really
created a core car yet, but though the company's start came with the
fast and sexy Roadster, CEO Elon Musk has the company focused on
delivering a mass-market electric car, the Model 3. It will supposedly
debut in 2017 and cost $35,000.
Ferraris captivate the imagination. You see one when you're a kid and
dream the Ferrari dream until you have the resources to buy one. The
buzz starts in childhood and lasts a lifetime.(Ferrari Facebook) Beautiful, fast, sexy, red, and Italian.
Teslas also captivate the imagination, but in a more rational way. Ferraris are sexy because they're Ferraris. Teslas are sexy because they want to change the world.
Although a car like the
Tesla Model S P85D, which sells for $130,000 with Ludicrous Mode
acceleration, is a luxury vehicle, owners don't think of the car that
way. If the Model S proclaims anything to the owners who love it, it
proclaims something bigger than the person driving it.
Ferrari wants to align your
dream with one of its cars. The DNA of Ferrari is racing, so an owner of
a road car will never quite achieve the heights that Ferrari wants to
ascend to. But when you buy your first Ferrari and take it out for that
first spin, you'll hopefully feel at peace with yourself.
Tesla is restless
The Tesla story is just beginning, while the Ferrari story — even though opening a new chapter with the IPO — has largely been told. For the moment, many potential Ferrari customers may also be potential Tesla customers.
Tesla doesn't want matters to
remain this way. To be sure, Tesla has thrived while other startup
carmakers have failed mainly because it's selling pricey machines. But
strangely, Tesla's business is moving in exactly the opposite direction
it should be if Musk want to nurture fat profit margins, of the sort
that Ferrari enjoys.
Tesla is a luxury carmaker that
wants to chase the Fords and Toyotas of the world. Ferrari, meanwhile,
wants to avoid becoming a mass-market brand at all costs. FCA CEO and
Ferrari Chairman wants to sell more cars than the 7,000 yearly total
that Ferrari notches. But he wants to do it with a few thousand more
$200,000 California T and FF models.
Musk, on the other hand, has
declared that Tesla's goal is be building 500,000 by 2020. And if Tesla
production comes in more or less on target in 2015, Musk's company will
sell seven times as many cars as Ferrari. There is no acceptable status
quo at Tesla. And there is no tradition. The entire undertaking is a
Moon shot.
(Justin Sullivan/Getty Images) The Model X SUV is a step on the road toward mass-market electrification.
Strong visions
Tesla and Ferrari are both special carmakers. This takes nothing from GM, Ford, Honda, BMW, Audi, Mercedes, or any of the the dozens of other car companies doing business. Many of those automakers are big and ambitious and charting innovative paths.
But you can really wrap your head around Tesla and Ferrari, because they both embody the unwavering visions of their leaders. Enzo Ferrari wanted to build the greatest race cars anyone had ever seen.
(The road cars came later.) Elon Musk wants to change how we get
around. (The incredibly fast electric cars that sell for a hundred grand
just came first.)
What Ferrari does have on Tesla
is, of course, history. However, as tempting as it might be for Tesla to
look at Ferrari's success — it is by some measures the biggest brand in
the world, bigger even than Apple — and hope to match it, that would be
a catastrophe for the Palo Alto company.
The bottom line is that Ferrari is special and must remain so forever.
Tesla is special at the moment.
But if everything goes according to plan, Tesla won't be special in 20
years; it will be ordinary. But it will have solved some major problems
with transportation and the environment — and helped create a world in
which Ferrari can continue to nurture dreams.
Source : BusinessInsider
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