Porsche Says Chinese Are Falling for Its Classic Sportscars

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Porsche says its classic two-door sportscars are starting to take off on the traffic-clogged streets of Beijing.
The luxury-car manufacturer so far hasnā€™t sold many of the two-seater 911s in China, where much of its clientele can afford a chauffeur. While the space-constrained vehicles remain the heart of the brandā€™s identity, SUVs provide the mainstay of sales. But that will change as Porsche continues to expand in the country that has become its biggest market, the brandā€™s head of sales Detlev von Platen said.
ā€œThe growth isnā€™t just coming from SUVs,ā€ von Platen said Wednesday in an interview at the Beijing motor show. ā€œDemand for our two-door sports cars, the 718 Cayman and Boxster, is developing extremely well.ā€
Porsche last year sold about 71,000 vehicles in China, a 10 percent increase, all of them imported and attracting steep levies. Just 11 percent were two-door sportscars, well below the one-quarter of sales in the U.S., its second-biggest market. There, the carmaker delivered some 55,000 vehicles.
ā€œWeā€™re doing a lot to push this development,ā€ said von Platen, with Porsche due to open a driving experience center in Shanghai on Thursday. ā€œItā€™s got to be possible to experience the car.ā€
China last week said it plans to remove rules that require foreign carmakers to enter into joint ventures to produce cars in the worldā€™s biggest market. From 2022 manufacturers, which operate under a 50:50 arrangement, can either buy out existing partners or strike out on their own. For Porsche, establishing production in China isnā€™t on the agenda, said von Platen.
ā€œChina is also set to lower import duties, so thatā€™s again lessening the case for such a plan,ā€ he said.
Source: Bloomberg
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