Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles On May 4th, 2020 something wild happens to automotive stocks. The market value of Italian supercar maker Ferrari soared to 30 billion dollars above those of all three major U.S. automakers, General Motors, Ford and Fiat Chrysler, which was once Ferrari's parent company compared with those three giants. Ferrari is a tiny carmaker. It has long been known for limiting production and makes just about 10000 units per year. Compare that with General Motors, which sold nearly eight million cars, trucks and SUV cars in twenty nineteen. While Ferrari is a small company. It is a huge name. One of the most famous and admired in the automotive world. In late May, a 2003 Ferrari Enzo fetched two point six million dollars on an online auction, making it the most valuable car sold in a dedicated online only. Collector car auction to date. We live in a world that's only more and more noisy all the time. I like to say there are more and more things going on there. More and more items competing for your attention. And in a world like that, if you've got a brand that can stand out, a brand that is universally recognized and can kind of step through and rise above that noise, you've got a very valuable brand. And Ferrari in the automotive world would be a perfect example of one of those brands. Perhaps aside from competitor Lamborghini, Ferrari is the name that has given Italy its reputation for producing some of the fastest, sleekest and most eye-catching cars on the planet. That reputation is so strong. Ferrari bets it can carry its world class name far beyond automotive production and sell other goods to the legions of admirers unable to afford a six or seven figure sports car. This gamble, however, is by no means a safe one. Stamping the Ferrari name on fashion, merchandise and even theme parks risks diluting the brand, especially if the famous pony emblem ends up on some less than premium products. The company has acknowledged this. Ferrari has also stumbled in Formula One, the global racing class where elite carmakers battle each other for worldwide recognition. Ferrari did not respond to a request in time for the story over the long term. The car market, really the idea of transportation itself, stands to undergo tremendous changes that could even affect demand for exotic sports cars. As we move into a world where we're getting increasingly electrified and potentially shifting away from vehicle ownership towards shared mobility. Is there still a place for a brand like Ferrari in the twenty 40s and the twenty 50s? Ferrari takes its name from founder Enzo Ferrari, an Italian racecar driver who had been racing Alfa Romeo cars since 1924. In 1929, Ferrari founded his own racing team, Scuderia Ferrari, which exists to this day based in Modena, Italy. Scuderi, a Ferrari, was at first a team centred on racing Alfa Romeos. But about a decade later, Enzo set up a manufacturer called out to Orville, construed Cioni and moved his headquarters from Modena to the city of Maranello, which would become Ferrari's legendary home. Thereafter, Ferrari was a car company that wanted to race, and Enzo Ferrari realized he had to sell a few cars to regular consumers so he could fund his racing program. That was literally the mantra and the vibe that started Ferrari. That was what the owner wanted to achieve. Ferrari commissioned the engineer Dwar Keno Colombo, to build him a totally new car in 1945. Ferrari's first racing car was the one twenty five s made in nineteen forty seven. It came with a 12 cylinder engine, something frequently seen on Ferrari's. Later, a street vehicle called the 166 Integra came. A year later, Ferrari started competing in Formula One, the elite global racing series in 1950 and won its first world title two years later. Racing has always been at the heart of the Ferrari brand Scuderia. Ferrari is the oldest Formula One team and has also participated in famous races such as the endurance races at Le Monde, France and Daytona, Florida, continuously. It's the only brand that has been continuously part of Formula One racing from 1950 onwards when a world championship was established. And they've also been involved in a lot of other motor sports. Unlike other brands, they've always tried to keep it relatively pure heel sports and grand touring cars. Being a small manufacturer of highly specialized cars is never an easy path to travel. Many such automakers have either formed partnerships with larger companies or been acquired entirely. Ferrari was no different. The Italian automaker Fiat took a 50 percent stake in the company in 1969 and increased its stake to 90 percent in 1988. Enzo Ferrari son Pietro owned the other 10 percent. And in 2016, Fiat, which had since become Fiat Chrysler, spun Ferrari out into a separate, publicly traded company, trading under the ticker symbol race. Ferrari is obviously best known for its cars. But the company has expanded the reach of the Ferrari brand beyond these small, rarefied world of racing fans and lovers of supercars. The late Sergio Marchione, the larger than life CEO of Fiat Chrysler, who also served as Ferrari's chairman and CEO until his death in 2018, had said in 2014 that he thought Ferrari had a future that went far beyond driving. I actually think cars are almost incidental to Ferrari, Marchione said prior to the company's initial public offering. It sounds sacrilegious, but it is truly a luxury brand up to its IPO. Marchione maintained Ferrari was worth at least 10 billion euros, around 11 billion dollars, according to May 2020 exchange rates. Some analysts thought that number sounded a bit high, with at least one valuing the company at roughly half that. But if market capitalization is any indicator, the company is worth about three times that just a few years later. Its revenues have not tripled in that time. Rather, the company and investors have been betting that brand recognition is an underexploited asset. At Ferrari, the Ferrari name and the famous yellow and black prancing horse logo are recognized the world over brand finance, a firm that measures the impact of various brands, considers Ferrari to be the most powerful brand in the world. Its fame either rivals or exceeds that of not only other global luxury symbols such as Rolex and Air May, but also the brand power of massive information technology and entertainment names such as Disney and Google and even purveyors of seemingly ubiquitous products such as Coca-Cola. This is especially striking when one considers Ferrari sells about 10000 cars per year. When Coca-Cola says it hands out one point nine billion servings of one of its drinks every day. They've been quite cautious about what they're doing, but the kind of primary. Primary thing that they've been really focused on is making sure that their models are really strong and they maintain their reputation for just for excellence in motor cars while not devaluing or reducing the strength of that brand. So Ferrari is looking for new ways to leverage that brand power. The company said it plans for branded goods to contribute 10 percent of earnings before interest and tax within the next decade. This includes merchandise such as clothing, coffee mugs and watches. The company operates its own stores and sells goods online through the years. Ferrari has stamped its logo on an array of products, including some very offbeat ones like Acer, laptop computers and mahjong sets. There is also a Ferrari world theme park in Abu Dhabi, complete with roller coasters. But there is definitely an opportunity to make a lot of money from their brand. I mean, if if it's closely connected to their brand and their experience, like in the case of the theme park, then that's probably good, because you can you can maintain the connection and the maintain sort of how the brand is perceived and seen to customers. And you have quite a lot of control over that. Of course, there are risks to this. The company acknowledged in filings that its attempts to reach more customers through merchandising could lead to some missteps. Branding is a tricky business. Part of what gives Ferrari its brand identity is exclusivity. The ten thousand one hundred thirty one cars it sold in twenty nineteen came after the company decided to lift its once strict production limit of 7000 cars per year. Waiting lists for Ferrari cars can be long. Buyers can wait four to five years for delivery of most customized Ferraris. The company is also known for being very picky about who it will even sell some of its limited edition vehicles to. Late racing legend and devoted Ferrari collector Preston Henn, who passed away in 2017. Had sued Ferrari, alleging that the company refused to sell him a Ferrari. Appeared to Hend had gone to great lengths to get the car. Even Mei-Ling million dollar check to Sergio Marchione. The check was returned. Hend slapped Ferrari with a defamation suit, which he later dropped. Then he bought an accurate NSX, a supercar from Honda's premium brand, which he said was better than a Ferrari. Anyway, the company has at times seemed even aggressive in controlling what its cars are associated with. In twenty nineteen, German fashion designer Philip Plein reportedly received a letter from lawyers representing the automaker complaining about pictures on his Instagram account. The lawyers considered persay distasteful, including pictures of shoes on the car and other photos. The letter said, tarnished the brand's image. The letter demanded Plein remove the pictures within 48 hours. The pictures and the image of the letter, which Flynn also posted, were later removed. It remains to be seen whether the company will be able to police the use of Ferrari baseball caps and key chains. But these efforts can fit Ferrari's Lux brand image in twenty nineteen. It formed a partnership with high end Italian clothier Giorgio Armani. For example. The company has cut back on its number of licensing partnerships and reduced the number of licensed products. When you start merchandising into lots of different product categories