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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 165
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 12:45 UTC
  • UTC12:45
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  • GMT13:45
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← The MonexusTech

Ferrari's Electric Gamble: How the First EV Reveal Sent Shares Down 8%

Ferrari's first fully electric car, the four-door Luce, launched to investor panic and enthusiast backlash. The 8% stock drop in Milan on 27 May 2026 exposed a deeper question: can the prancing horse maintain its brand premium through the energy transition, or does going electric crack the very identity that commands a six-figure premium?

Ferrari's first fully electric car, the four-door Luce, launched to investor panic and enthusiast backlash. Al Jazeera / Photography

When Ferrari executives rolled out the Luce on the morning of 27 May 2026, the reaction in Maranello and the trading floors of Milan diverged sharply. Enthusiasts who had awaited a revolution were confronted with a four-door saloon carrying a six-figure price tag and an electric drivetrain that did away with everything the prancing horse had once symbolised. Within hours, Ferrari shares had shed approximately 8%, erasing a significant chunk of the company's market capitalisation in a single session.

The stock collapse was the bluntest possible verdict on a launch that had been months in the making. Ferrari had managed expectations carefully before the unveiling, but the Luce—a name meaning light in Italian—proved harder to position than the company anticipated. The four-door layout marked a departure from every mid-rear-engine layout in Ferrari's recent history. The absence of a combustion soundtrack meant that the visceral feedback the brand's core customers had come to expect was simply gone. And at €550,000 before options, the vehicle entered a price bracket where traditional Ferrari buyers could more easily absorb the loss of identity that electric propulsion demands.

The Traditionalist Revolt

The backlash was immediate and pointed. On forums and social media channels long populated by Ferrari's most loyal customers, the reception was roughly summarised by a recurring refrain: this is not what Ferrari is supposed to be. The brand's identity has been constructed over decades around a specific engineering philosophy—high-revving naturally aspirated engines, rear-wheel drive, and a chassis balance optimised for a driver who wanted to feel everything the car was doing. The Luce, by contrast, is a grand tourer with a silent electric drivetrain and a saloon body profile that owes more to the Mercedes-AMG GT four-door than to any Ferrari lineage.

Some traditionalists went further. Ferrari has historically prided itself on the noises its engines make—the spine-tingling induction roar of a 458 Speciale, the hard-edged crack of a 488's exhaust on upshift, the theatrical flat-plane crank wail of the 458 Speciale's successor. The Luce makes none of those noises. For customers for whom the soundtrack of a Ferrari is inseparable from the ownership experience, silence is not a virtue. It is an absence of everything they paid for.

The Guardian's reporting on 27 May detailed the extent of the backlash, noting that Ferrari had broken with its own past in ways that left traditionalists furious. The four-door format alone represented a conceptual break from the two-seat sports car orthodoxy that has defined Ferrari's product range since the 1960s. Add the electric drivetrain and a kerb weight that necessarily exceeds any petrol-powered Ferrari of comparable performance, and the Luce begins to look less like a Ferrari and more like a Taycan competitor wearing a prancing horse badge.

The Market Reacts

The financial response was swift and unambiguous. Shares in Milan fell about 8% in the hours following the presentation, a move that wiped a material amount of value from Ferrari's balance sheet in a matter of minutes. Market participants who had hoped for a clean transition narrative—Ferrari embracing the future while preserving its brand equity—were confronted with a product that satisfied neither the purists who want a traditional Ferrari nor the new-wave EV buyers who want a technology statement. The trading reaction suggested that investors had priced in a more sympathetic reception than the market delivered.

The stock decline was not, by most accounts, a verdict on the strategic logic of Ferrari going electric. The company has been explicit that the transition to electric propulsion is irreversible and that the Luce is the first in a line of battery-electric models that will eventually replace the combustion range. Rather, the market was reacting to a product that seemed to misread its own audience. Ferrari has always sold to customers who want to feel that they have purchased something irreplaceable, something that cannot be replicated by a competitor or approximated by a lesser badge. The Luce, as presented, offered less clarity on that front than the brand's petrol cars have traditionally delivered.

The Structural Challenge of Electrifying a Legend

Ferrari's dilemma is not unique in the luxury segment. Porsche navigated a similar tension when it launched the Taycan and absorbed the complaints of 911 loyalists who viewed the electric saloon as an act of brand betrayal. BMW faced comparable resistance when it introduced electric variants of its core M-car line. But Ferrari occupies a more acute position. Its brand premium is almost entirely derived from the emotional and sensory experience of its petrol cars. Where Porsche can point to the Taycan's engineering excellence as a reason to overlook its differences from a 911, Ferrari cannot easily separate its product identity from the engine note and the visceral driving experience that the combustion system uniquely provides.

The electric transition also imposes physical constraints that cut against Ferrari's traditional engineering strengths. An electric drivetrain is heavier than a comparable petrol system, partly because of the battery mass required to deliver acceptable range. That additional weight changes the handling balance in ways that are difficult to mask with suspension tuning alone. Ferrari engineers have worked hard to offset the battery penalty, but the fundamental physics are not negotiable. A four-door electric Ferrari will be heavier than a comparable two-door petrol Ferrari, and that weight has implications for the car's agility and its track-capable performance edge.

The broader automotive market context matters here. Electric vehicles have reached a level of performance that makes the traditional performance hierarchy largely irrelevant from a raw numbers standpoint. A Lucid Air Sapphire will outrun a standard Ferrari 296 GTB in a straight line. A Rimac Nevera will embarrass any Ferrari road car on both track and straight. The EV revolution has democratised speed in ways that were impossible to imagine a decade ago, and that democratisation undermines the premise on which Ferrari's performance premium has rested. Going electric does not automatically confer competitive advantage in a world where every manufacturer is going electric. It levels the performance field while introducing new dimensions of brand risk.

What Happens Next

Ferrari has committed publicly to the electric transition and has signalled that the Luce is the opening move in a longer strategy. The question is whether the brand can find its footing in a market where its traditional differentiators are eroding and its new identity has not yet been established. The stock drop will eventually recover if the Luce delivers on its commercial targets. But the enthusiast backlash signals something harder to address: a body of core customers who do not yet see themselves in an electric Ferrari and who may not be retained through the transition.

For investors, the immediate risk is that the Luce underperforms sales expectations while the brand absorbs the costs of developing an electric platform that has yet to prove its commercial viability at Ferrari price points. For the company, the longer-term risk is that the enthusiast base—which has historically driven word-of-mouth referrals and aspirational brand positioning—migrates toward marques that maintain a stronger connection to combustion-era identity. Porsche has managed that tension more successfully than most. Ferrari's ability to replicate that outcome will determine whether the prancing horse retains its pulling power in a silent, electrified automotive future.

The sources do not yet indicate whether Ferrari executives have responded publicly to the stock decline or to the enthusiast criticism, and it remains unclear whether the company plans to adjust the Luce's specification, pricing, or positioning before the first customer deliveries begin. What is clear is that the launch has opened a chapter in Ferrari's history that will be difficult to close.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/AngelList/123456
  • https://t.me/producthunt/789012
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrari
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_car
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luxury_cars
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire