Ferrari targeting the sports-car leery

Luxury-car maker hoping easy-driving, less flashy Roma will fill a buyer niche

Flavio Manzoni, Ferrari design senior vice president, shows off the new Roma sports coupe last week in Rome.
Flavio Manzoni, Ferrari design senior vice president, shows off the new Roma sports coupe last week in Rome.

ROME -- Ferrari unveiled a new, easy-driving coupe dubbed Roma aimed at attracting buyers who have been intimidated by sports cars and perhaps even the Prancing Horse's racing heritage.

The Ferrari Roma is the fifth new model unveiled by the luxury sports-car maker this year and one of 15 to be rolled out through 2022 under an ambitious model overhaul.

"We believe we will attract an important number of new-to-Ferrari clients," Enrico Galliera, the commercial and marketing director, said last week.

Unveiled in the Italian capital, the Roma is designed "for people who would like to drive a sports car, or a Ferrari, but are a little bit afraid of Ferrari and sports cars," he said.

It brings a sports car sleekness with the comforts of so-called Gran Turismo cars meant to be easy to drive over longer distances. Together with the SF90 Stradale, Ferrari's first production series plug-in hybrid debuted earlier this year, it represents a new kind of offering.

Despite its newer technologies, the SF90 Stradale is nevertheless meant to appeal to traditional Ferrari fans "looking for the maximum performance without compromise," Galliera said.

The Roma has a V8 engine, 620 horsepower, and will be priced at over $220,000; the first deliveries will be made by summer.

It taps the romance of the iconic midfront-engine grand touring Ferraris of the 1960s, combining it with luxury, comfort and driveability.

It has two small back seats to squeeze in passengers or extra luggage, while both the driver and front-seat passenger are encased in their own "cockpits" with state-of-the-art video displays.

With a less flashy customer in mind, Ferrari unveiled the Roma in blue-gray, titanium gray and white versions, rather than in the typical Ferrari red. Buyers will have access to all of Ferrari's personalization options, one of the carmaker's luxury services.

Pegging the Roma's competitor is tough, said Ben Miller, editor of Car magazine in the U.K. Candidates include the Porsche 911, the Aston Martin DB11 and the McClaren GT, which Miller said "seems the squarest rival." Still, the Roma pricing is considerably higher than others in the segment.

Ferrari will produce about 10,000 cars this year, its highest level ever. Galliera said Ferrari is not chasing volumes with the new Roma, despite its intention to create a new customer base.

The market shouldn't expect the same number of new Ferraris next year.

"We have to make sure our network is able to understand the placement of the new models," and guarantee their success, Galliera said.

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