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Ferrari aims to prove doubters wrong after EV debut

If Ferrari wants to attract the world’s attention with its first fully electric car, the Luce, the mission has been successfully completed, although most of the reactions have been shock and anger.

The new model is a four-door, five-seat family car and is nothing like the Italian brand’s usual low-slung, gasoline-powered sports cars.

It was unveiled at a gala event in Rome late Monday and shown the next day to Italian President Sergio Mattarella and Pope Leo, a well-known car enthusiast who appeared happy to sit in the driver’s seat.

But the styling, which is largely the work of auto industry outsiders Jony Ive and Marc Newson and their collective LoveFrom, left many fans and commentators stunned. Ive is best known as the designer of Apple’s iPhones and MacBooks.

Social media is full of unpleasant memes, variously comparing the Luce to a vacuum cleaner, a rubber clog, or the much-maligned Fiat Multipla, which was often cited as among the world’s ugliest cars in the 1990s.

Italian Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini publicly wondered what founder Enzo Ferrari, who died in 1988, would make of this.

Former Ferrari CEO Luca Cordero di Montezemolo said that the prancing horse logo on the car should be removed.

Investors were also hesitant. Milan-listed Ferrari shares tumbled 8.4 percent on Tuesday, with one investor telling Reuters the stock was “punished for aesthetic disappointment.”

Felipe Munoz of Auto Industry Analysis noted that Ferrari was probably expecting turmoil, given the deliberate break with tradition, and that negative publicity was still publicity.

“From a communications perspective, they have managed to get the world talking about electric Ferrari,” he said.

“They did it on awareness because there is nothing else right now.”

Munoz described Luce as a “flashy product”; It’s not expected to be a big seller, but it’s key to showcasing the technology and repositioning Ferrari in the electric age.

A company source previously noted that Ferrari’s curveballs – the all-wheel-drive FF in 2011 and the Purosangue SUV in 2022 – also raised doubts before selling well.

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