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Montezemolo said Ferrari will invest another 100 million euros in 2013-2015 on new facilities. In all, Ferrari employs 3,000 people to produce five production models based on V-8 and V-12 engines. It also makes limited edition exclusives, like the hybrid La Ferrari shown this year at the Geneva Motor Show and which has already sold out to a selected 499 clients, in addition to the Formula 1 program. All of it, from the foundry for engine heads to an
'atelier' where clients customize their Ferrari's down to the stitching on the leather seats, is located on a leafy green complex that employees can navigate on bicycle. The factory produces 32 cars a day, with one 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. shift on the assembly line. ''In all of our 7,000 cars a year, there doesn't exist one that is like any other," Montezemolo said.
''For me, exclusivity is the strength of the brand. I don't like to speak of luxury. I like to speak of beauty and taste." The United States remains Ferrari's main market in terms of unit sales, followed by Chinese-speaking nations, Germany and then Britain. Currently, Europe and the Middle East contribute 52 percent of revenues, America 20 percent and Asia 30 percent. By 2017, Montezemolo wants to shift the distribution to 30 percent each from America and Asia and 40 percent from Europe and the Middle East. Montezemolo said there are two things that Ferrari will never do as long as he is running the show: make a smaller Ferrari or an all-electric vehicle.
[Associated
Press;
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