"With the kind of pre-launch response so far for the Aventador S LP 740-4 Coupe, I am very confident to take the overall share of the Aventador family in our portfolio to 20- 25 per cent from 10 per cent now. I am already sold out for the first year," Sharad Agarwal, Lamborghini India head, told PTI here.
"We want to reduce this dependence and and increase the Aventador share," he said, adding globally the Huracan chips in about 70 per cent for the group and the rest comes from the Aventadors and we want to have this balance here as well.
The Huracan is priced almost 50 per cent cheaper than the Aventador. Since the launch, the company has sold more than 5,000 units of this car.
The extreme super-sports car segment is defined as those with two-doors and two-seater, priced over 1,10,000 euros and have a torque of 400 ps or more. This segment had a volume of 70 units last year, said Agarwal, who also claimed they are the leaders in this space with over 40 per cent of the market pie.
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Agarwal said the extreme super-sports car segment had contracted after 2011 when it had peaked at 90 units. It revived only last last year with the volume growing to 70 before falling to 40 units in the previous year.
He also said over next two-three years this segment should be clocking three-digits volume, and based his optimism on GST, which although will not have any tax benefits, will ease the taxation process a lot, thereby boosting the GDP.
The new Aventador S, mounted on a 6.5 litre engine, is priced at Rs 5.01 crore and upwards depending on customisation competes with its sister brand Audi R8, Ferarri FF, Mercedes AMG GLS, BMW i8 & M6 among others.
The previous Aventador model was priced at Rs 4.32 crore, while the Ferarri FF and its other variants come under Rs 4 crore, the i8 and Merc AMG come at around Rs 2.5 crore or thereabout.