Rolls-Royce sees demand for bespoke cars offsetting China slump


LONDON: Rolls-Royce Motor Cars Ltd.’s chief executive officer said rising demand for personalised vehicles is helping the British luxury-car maker counter weakening sales in China.

The luxury market in the world’s second-largest economy "is experiencing some more challenging times,” CEO Chris Brownridge said Wednesday.

He added that the BMW AG-owned manufacturer can manage because of its flexibility and sales in other regions.

Rolls-Royce is seeing increasing demand for "bespoke and personal motor cars,” Brownridge said in an interview with Bloomberg Television.

"Overall, we can balance our business really effectively.”

Manufacturers have been grappling with a pullback from once-flush shoppers in China, the biggest auto market and a key driver of global luxury spending.

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Rolls-Royce Private Office New York.

The country’s consumers have turned more price-sensitive in the face of an economic slowdown and property market crash.

Rolls-Royce also is dealing with the fallout from a BMW recall that’s expected to cost the group nearly €1 billion (RM4.6bil).

It affects around 600 of Rolls-Royce’s US$420,000 (RM1.7mil) Spectre models in North America, the CEO said, adding that the company is fixing the electric vehicles as quickly as possible.

Rolls-Royce sold 6,032 vehicles last year, with the US and greater China its top markets.

China remains "very important” to Rolls-Royce because of a rising number of ultra-high net worth individuals there, said the CEO.

Brownridge spoke from Rolls-Royce’s new private office in New York City, which is aimed at serving the brand’s most well-heeled customers in that market.

In the six months after opening a similar facility in Shanghai, Rolls-Royce engaged with more than 200 clients there, the CEO said.
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