IPO ahead, Ferrari looks to buff brand

Carmaker aims to expand on cachet

A man watches outside a shop window of a Ferrari Store in Milan, Italy, Tuesday, Dec.9, 2014. Ferrari’s sleek sports cars and souped-up Formula 1 racing machines have made the prancing horse logo among the world’s most powerful brands. Now, as the company prepares for a public listing, it wants to cash in on the cachet. The aim: position Ferrari not just among its car-making peers, but as a luxury goods company. Think Armani, Hermes ... Ferrari. Analysts say that could mean refining its line of merchandise, expanding upon a theme park franchise or creating a chain of members’ clubs and hotels catering to the rich. Chairman Sergio Marchionne will present his vision to investors in the coming weeks, but the potential already has two worlds spinning in anticipation. (AP PhotoAP Photo/Luca Bruno)
A man watches outside a shop window of a Ferrari Store in Milan, Italy, Tuesday, Dec.9, 2014. Ferrari’s sleek sports cars and souped-up Formula 1 racing machines have made the prancing horse logo among the world’s most powerful brands. Now, as the company prepares for a public listing, it wants to cash in on the cachet. The aim: position Ferrari not just among its car-making peers, but as a luxury goods company. Think Armani, Hermes ... Ferrari. Analysts say that could mean refining its line of merchandise, expanding upon a theme park franchise or creating a chain of members’ clubs and hotels catering to the rich. Chairman Sergio Marchionne will present his vision to investors in the coming weeks, but the potential already has two worlds spinning in anticipation. (AP PhotoAP Photo/Luca Bruno)

MILAN -- Ferrari's sleek sports cars and souped-up Formula 1 racing machines have made the prancing horse logo among the world's most powerful brands. Now, as the company prepares for a public listing, it wants to cash in on the cachet.

The aim: position Ferrari not just as a carmaker but as a luxury-goods company. Analysts say that could mean refining its line of merchandise or creating a chain of exclusive clubs and hotels catering to Ferrari owners and the wealthy.

Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV Chairman Sergio Marchionne will present his vision to investors in the coming weeks, but the potential already has the two worlds spinning in anticipation.

The made-in-Italy luxury-goods sector is abuzz over whether Marchionne's ambition could facilitate the creation of an alliance of high-end producers, one that might stand up to the French conglomerates such as LVMH, while financial analysts are crunching numbers on the brand's potential value.

"I actually think cars are almost incidental to Ferrari," Marchionne said last month when announcing plans to spin off Ferrari from its mass-market parent Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV. "It sounds sacrilegious. But it is truly a luxury brand."

Persuading the investing community of that distinction could significantly multiply Ferrari's market value by putting it among a category of companies that squeeze value not just out of the quality of the materials and products, but also out of their allure.

Marchionne has room to leverage.

Although Ferrari's brand has been named the world's most recognizable for two years straight in a survey by London-based consultants Brand Finance, it is only 350th in value, around $4 billion.

Lifting that figure is Marchionne's goal between now and the initial public offering, due in the second or third quarter next year.

A surge in Fiat's share price by as much as 30 percent since the Ferrari spinoff was announced indicates the potential of the deal, although most analysts aren't buying Marchionne's estimate that Ferrari is worth $12.5 billion. Max Warburton of Bernstein Research puts the figure around $6.2 billion-$7.4 billion.

Getting a higher valuation is a tricky balance between finding new sources of sales to increase revenue and protecting the brand's exclusivity.

"If you think of the capacity of the Ferrari brand in the luxury space, there are many avenues you can take from a product perspective," said Anil Valsan, an EY automotive analyst. "But at the same time, you have to be very careful about not damaging the brand. It is absolutely critical that the brand's value is not lost by diversifying into too many products."

Currently, its revenue stream is limited by the fact that it keeps car sales to just 7,000 a year to retain an aura of exclusivity. Also, manufacturing high-performance engines and race cars is more capital intensive than, say, fashion.

Ferrari could take a gamble and expand its range of car offerings to include SUVs, a well-performing segment globally. That would bring its automotive portfolio closer in line with competitors Porsche or Bentley. Lamborghini, another Italian sports-car maker, has previewed a concept SUV.

Already the brand presents itself as a luxury producer, with such services as on-sight studios for Ferrari buyers to customize their sports cars and a racetrack for Ferrari owners to do test drives.

But analysts say there is more the company can do to monetize that image. One strategy could be creating an exclusive Ferrari club that could eventually be expanded to hotels catering to Ferrari owners and very high net-worth individuals, said Brand Finance executive Robert Haigh.

In addition, the Ferrari World theme park -- which is being expanded from Abu Dhabi to Barcelona -- could be taken global, capitalizing on Ferrari's reputation for cutting-edge technology, he said.

And while Ferrari is already selling branded fashion items -- Oakley sunglasses, watches and a $1,546 LaFerrari lamb nappa leather jacket -- not all products bearing the Formula 1 Scuderia logo are of the same high quality.

"There are Ferrari caps, rubbish jackets and watches that are not necessarily expensive or well-made," Haigh said. "They are not necessarily protecting the Scuderia brand the way they should be."

Business on 12/12/2014

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