Posts Tagged porsche
Trend To Watch: Luxury Automakers Moving Inland
Following the lead of luxury brands like Louis Vuitton and others, luxury automakers too are looking to inland China for long-term growth.
Read Full Story »Lamborghini To Produce Estoque In China In 2012?
Last month, Lamborghini announced it would introduce eight models to the China market in the remainder of the year, and today the company announced that it plans to go a step further in 2012 and actually produce its four-door Estoque in China.
Read Full Story »China Becomes #1 Market For Porsche Cayenne
Porsche has benefitted greatly from China’s growing love affair with the automobile, going from sales of around 50 vehicles per year after entering the mainland market in 2001 to over 8,500 in 2009.
Read Full Story »Lamborghini Bringing 8 New Models To China This Year
The red-hot China auto market has been good to everyone from low-end domestic upstarts to ultra-high-end super car makers, and in the last year alone we’ve watched the world’s top brands battle it out for a stronger foothold there.
Read Full Story »China Auto News: Geely, Maybach, Volkswagen
Although the week is only halfway over, there’s been a great deal of action in the Chinese auto market.
Read Full Story »Aston Martin: From Bond To Beijing
This week, UK automaker Aston Martin opened its new flagship store on 66 Jinbao Street in Beijing. This colossal showroom, more than double the size of Beijing’s two existing Aston Martin dealerships, is also the largest in the entire Asia-Pacific region.
Read Full Story »Predictions For 2010: The Chinese Luxury Buyer
Vivian Wai-yin Kwok of Forbes suggests that 2010 will be the a year of continued spending on so-called “practical” luxury items in China (contemporary art, luxury cars, and high-end real estate), rather than big-ticket items like yachts or private jets. We would go one step further.
Read Full Story »“Made In China — And Sold There Too”
The rise of the Chinese consumer class is not new, but an interesting development we’re seeing become far more ubiquitous is more cultural acceptance of the conspicuous consumer in China.
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