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Ferrari Finds Even the Rich Are Rethinking Their Spending Plans

Even a supercar maker isn’t immune to a car market that has rapidly deteriorated in recent months.

By Daniele Lepido

(Bloomberg) -- Supercar manufacturers typically operate in the rarefied sphere of recession-proof consumption, where wealthy customers possess enough money to drop $300,000 or more on their purchases.

On Friday, Ferrari NV experienced the limits of that behavior, reporting growth in the second quarter far behind the first three months of the year, sending its stock tumbling. Both profit and shipments slowed, with vehicle deliveries only about a third of the gain the Italian company had delivered during the first quarter.

Ferrari fell the most in almost ten months after climbing 70% this year before Friday’s setback. Some investors had hoped to see a raised outlook, which didn’t materialize. It shows even a supercar maker isn’t immune to a car market that has rapidly deteriorated in recent months, with companies from Daimler to BMW to Toyota cutting their goals as customers have second thoughts about purchases.

The company’s deliveries rose 8% during the second quarter, less than the 23% during the first three months of the year, Ferrari said. The slowdown followed rival Aston Martin Lagonda this week reporting lower vehicle prices, an ominous development for an elite brand.

Operating return on sales was “a touch” worse than expectations, Mediobanca analyst Andrea Balloni said in a note. Ferrari’s own forecast range on annual operating profit is below market expectations, he said. The shares fell as much as 6.9%.

While rising sales of the entry-level Portofino model continue to drive volumes, this was partially offset by lower deliveries of high-end vehicles like the 488 GTB, Ferrari said. Adjusted earnings before interest and amortization rose to 314 million euros ($349 million). Analysts’ estimates averaged 315.1 million euros.

Ferrari’s results remain more encouraging than the profit warnings and sharp declines in profit across other manufacturers. The industry faces an economic slowdown and trade tensions against a backdrop of the need for unprecedented spending on electric cars.

Demand in China has shrunk 12% through June, as Ferrari’s deliveries in the world’s biggest car market jumped up by more than half.

Ferrari fell 3.8% to 143.75 euros at 1:48 p.m. in Milan trading, paring gains this year to 66%.

Profit Goal

Chief Executive Officer Louis Camilleri is pursuing a target to generate 2 billion euros in operating profit before some items no later than 2022 for the brand with the prancing-horse logo. To get there, he’s planning more profit-boosting limited-edition sports cars, and will unveil a record five new models in the coming months.

In May, Ferrari showed off its first production-volume plug-in hybrid, the 1,000-horsepower SF90 Stradale to keep pace with tightening emissions regulations while still satisfying its power-hungry customers.

--With assistance from Karen Lin.

To contact the reporter on this story:
Daniele Lepido in Milan at [email protected]

To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Elisabeth Behrmann at [email protected]
John Bowker

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