Supercar Sales Drop By Two Thirds

Supercar Sales Drop By Two Thirds

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Discussion

Gnevans

Original Poster:

433 posts

124 months

Monday 30th October 2023
quotequote all
Article in today’s Times.

Supercar registrations fell by two thirds March 22-23 660 odd registered whilst in the previous year it was circa1900.




Tagteam

294 posts

25 months

Monday 30th October 2023
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Decline of the YouTuber

ex-devonpaul

1,213 posts

139 months

Monday 30th October 2023
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This is new registrations.

In which case there will be a decline in used supply shortly which should prop up prices.

Unless the manufacturer goes under.

bryn_p

465 posts

231 months

Monday 30th October 2023
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Gnevans said:
Article in today’s Times.

Supercar registrations fell by two thirds March 22-23 660 odd registered whilst in the previous year it was circa1900.
Does the article define what they are counting as a supercar?

Genuine question, not meaning to open a massive can of worms... again boxedin

Gnevans

Original Poster:

433 posts

124 months

Monday 30th October 2023
quotequote all
Annual sales of new “supercars” fell by two thirds as the super-rich slowed their post-pandemic spending splurge.

In the year to March, only 621 new supercars produced by the largest luxury manufacturers were registered in the UK, compared with 1,906 new cars added in the year to March 2022 and 1,099 in 2021. Between them, Bugatti, Ferrari, Koenigsegg, Lamborghini and McLaren had about 19,500 cars on the road by the end of March this year, official figures from the DVLA show.

Consumer tastes have shifted away from specialist sports cars, with figures from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders showing market share in Britain has fallen by 52 per cent over the past decade.

David Kendrick, from UHY Hacker Young, the accountantcy group that compiled the analysis, said that interest rate rises were a key reason. “Interest rates are impacting every corner of the economy,” he said. “The slowdown in supercar sales shows that not even the ultra-wealthy are immune.”

The sector looks likely to be the last to switch to electric cars. Stephan Winkelmann, the boss of Lamborghini, said last week that the company “can afford to leave the door open for a few years yet” on electric-powered supercars.

Michael Leiters, McLaren’s chief executive, said last month it would be “very, very challenging” to make a “relevant” electric supercar by the end of the decade.

BlackR8

459 posts

79 months

Monday 30th October 2023
quotequote all
Gnevans said:
Consumer tastes have shifted away from specialist sports cars, with figures from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders showing market share in Britain has fallen by 52 per cent over the past decade.
This is an interesting stat, I was under the impression that the volume of supercars being bought over the last decade was increasing significantly rather than declining, especially in a decade of cheap finance and credit.

CloudStuff

3,716 posts

106 months

Monday 30th October 2023
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[obvious gag]

Interesting, I wonder if something interesting is happening to R8 sales?

[/obvious gag]

Mark_Blanchard

764 posts

257 months

Monday 30th October 2023
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It's not really surprising considering interest rates are back to their historical average and money is more expensive to borrow.

This will surely have a knock on effect with second hand prices too.

bryn_p

465 posts

231 months

Monday 30th October 2023
quotequote all
Mark_Blanchard said:
It's not really surprising considering interest rates are back to their historical average and money is more expensive to borrow.

This will surely have a knock on effect with second hand prices too.
I'd say it already has, just look at what is selling (or not) on Collecting Cars for example

murphyaj

670 posts

77 months

Monday 30th October 2023
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I'd be curious to see a breakdown here, but I can't seem to find the data from the DVLA / Department Of Transport. The .gov website only seems to have aggregate data. I imagine a lot of detail is going to get missed in the headline figures here.

They are partly blaming interest rates, but supercars tend to be ordered several months in advance, and these figures cover the period Apr 2022 to Mar 2023. The cars in question will have been ordered possibly as early as Q4 2021, when interest rates were still below 0.5%, and it wasn't until Q4 2022 that they went above 2.5%. It would be good to see how they changed month-on-month.

As with others I am curious what they count as a supercar. Lamborghini sells more SUVs than supercars now, are they including the Urus? If so the numbers for actual supercars will be much lower than they appear here. How much of this is the shifting of production volumes around between models?

Bispal

1,623 posts

153 months

Monday 30th October 2023
quotequote all
ex-devonpaul said:
This is new registrations.

In which case there will be a decline in used supply shortly which should prop up prices.

Unless the manufacturer goes under.
Very true ^^^

I doubt the interest rates have any impact on the 'super-rich'.

Most likely the other article at the weekend that said sales were down due to those with "10% deposit / 90% finance". Sales were strong in the £1M+ price bracket and stable in the 50/50 finance £250-350k bracket with plenty of buyers.

Assuming you have the funds and you want a 'bog standard' brand new 2 door, 2 seater, v8 (or v6 as its now seems) supercar what options do you have?

750s - I doubt many will buy, too similar to 720s
296 GTB - difficult enough for Ferrari to supply at current levels as it is (other Ferraris special / ltd editions are not supercars)
Huracan - too old?
McLaren MC20 - possibly

So even if you had cash what exactly would you buy new? There is very little available. There is nothing I would buy ATM if I had £1M in my pocket except perhaps a Superformance GT40 and a house in Antibes with the change. I would suggest this is why sales are slow rather than papers guessing what the super rich may or may not be doing.










willy wombat

921 posts

150 months

Monday 30th October 2023
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You won’t get much of a house in Antibes for £1m, never mind the change.

cgt2

7,109 posts

190 months

Monday 30th October 2023
quotequote all
willy wombat said:
You won’t get much of a house in Antibes for £1m, never mind the change.
A small flat at best

Nuttbelle

537 posts

12 months

Monday 30th October 2023
quotequote all
Bispal said:
Assuming you have the funds and you want a 'bog standard' brand new 2 door, 2 seater, v8 (or v6 as its now seems) supercar what options do you have?

750s - I doubt many will buy, too similar to 720s
296 GTB - difficult enough for Ferrari to supply at current levels as it is (other Ferraris special / ltd editions are not supercars)
Huracan - too old?
McLaren MC20 - possibly
Huracan Tecnica as the last, best and rarest N/A V10 lamborghini.
Ala 458 and speciale

Proper old school supercar.

I'm afraid the golden era of suoercars is over from here.

Going twin turbo was bad enough but going hybrid and EV is just a step too far.

RIP the supercar, motoring will never be the same in your million bhp white good


Bispal

1,623 posts

153 months

Monday 30th October 2023
quotequote all
cgt2 said:
willy wombat said:
You won’t get much of a house in Antibes for £1m, never mind the change.
A small flat at best
That will do :-)

Bispal

1,623 posts

153 months

Monday 30th October 2023
quotequote all
Nuttbelle said:
Bispal said:
Assuming you have the funds and you want a 'bog standard' brand new 2 door, 2 seater, v8 (or v6 as its now seems) supercar what options do you have?

750s - I doubt many will buy, too similar to 720s
296 GTB - difficult enough for Ferrari to supply at current levels as it is (other Ferraris special / ltd editions are not supercars)
Huracan - too old?
McLaren MC20 - possibly
Huracan Tecnica as the last, best and rarest N/A V10 lamborghini.
Ala 458 and speciale

Proper old school supercar.

I'm afraid the golden era of suoercars is over from here.

Going twin turbo was bad enough but going hybrid and EV is just a step too far.

RIP the supercar, motoring will never be the same in your million bhp white good
And that's partly why sales are down. Nothing to buy. The super rich are now buying resto mods, not new supercars, who wants a new supercar anyway?





Terminator X

15,221 posts

206 months

Monday 30th October 2023
quotequote all
CloudStuff said:
[obvious gag]

Interesting, I wonder if something interesting is happening to R8 sales?

[/obvious gag]
Hold on a R8 isn't ... scratchchin

TX.

PushedDover

5,702 posts

55 months

Monday 30th October 2023
quotequote all
Bispal said:
Nuttbelle said:
Bispal said:
Assuming you have the funds and you want a 'bog standard' brand new 2 door, 2 seater, v8 (or v6 as its now seems) supercar what options do you have?

750s - I doubt many will buy, too similar to 720s
296 GTB - difficult enough for Ferrari to supply at current levels as it is (other Ferraris special / ltd editions are not supercars)
Huracan - too old?
McLaren MC20 - possibly
Huracan Tecnica as the last, best and rarest N/A V10 lamborghini.
Ala 458 and speciale

Proper old school supercar.

I'm afraid the golden era of suoercars is over from here.

Going twin turbo was bad enough but going hybrid and EV is just a step too far.

RIP the supercar, motoring will never be the same in your million bhp white good
And that's partly why sales are down. Nothing to buy. The super rich are now buying resto mods, not new supercars, who wants a new supercar anyway?
Bespokeness Matters.

AndyC_123

1,121 posts

156 months

Monday 30th October 2023
quotequote all
Would have thought the delay in getting new cars that almost every manufacturer has had will have a fair impact in this too

Nuttbelle

537 posts

12 months

Monday 30th October 2023
quotequote all
Bispal said:
And that's partly why sales are down. Nothing to buy. The super rich are now buying resto mods, not new supercars, who wants a new supercar anyway?
I'm definitely not super rich but i have always had new cars on order for the last 10 years but not anymore as none of the new stuff interests me at all.
Purely looking at the best of the back catalogue now.