The Cambodia Daily
February 20, 2013
Though still one of the poorest countries in the region, Cambodia’s
recent economic growth has birthed a new class of consumer. And waiting
in the wings is German automaker Porsche, which intends to sell its
distinctive sports cars directly to Phnom Penh’s wealthy within a year.
Following hot on the heels of rival BMW, Porsche will begin
construction on a $1.5 million showroom and service center in Phnom Penh
shortly after mid-year, said Graeme Hunter, Cambodia general manager
for Hong Kong-based automobile retailer Lei Shing Hong Limited, which
will build and operate the facility on behalf of Porsche.
“The timing is right,” Mr. Hunter said on Monday. “BMW is
coming…Mercedes is here already, so it makes sense for Porsche to be
here as well.”
Lei Shing Hong—which is also Porsche’s authorized distributor in
Vietnam and South Korea—will invest an initial $2 million in Cambodia,
and hopes to import between 40 and 50 vehicles by early 2014, Mr.
Hunter said. With tax, the company’s range of iconic 911 coupes,
Panamera sedans and Cayenne SUVs will sell for between $100,000 and
$200,000.
Mr. Hunter conceded that marketing the luxury cars won’t be easy.
“It’s going to be tough…. The brand awareness is not what it would be
in other countries,” he said, referring the Cambodians’ affinity for
large SUVs made by Japan’s Toyota and Lexus.
But echoing the argument made by Munich-based BMW when it broke
ground on a dealership on Russian Boulevard in Pur Senchey district in
December, Mr. Hunter said that by offering a warranty and after-sales
maintenance, Porsche would be able to compete with the country’s many
“gray-market” importers, who offer vehicles of murky provenance with
no guarantee of quality.
There are currently about 40 “gray-market” Porsches in Cambodia, Mr.
Hunter estimated, mostly Cayenne SUVs, which sell for about $130,000.
Peter Brongers, CEO of Premium Auto Import Co. Ltd., BMW’s
authorized distributor in Cambodia and a subsidiary of local
conglomerate Royal Group, said that while a newfound taste for German
cars among Cambodia’s wealthy would help Porsche’s sales, its vehicles
may be perceived as impractical.
“A Porsche is a sports car—it’s a low sports car,” Mr. Brongers said,
adding that the company’s cars would not be useful outside Phnom Penh,
where roads are frequently in dire shape—unlike his own brand of German
luxury car.
“Even if the roads are not so great, a BMW drives really well,” he added.
Finn Gundersen, general manager at Envotech Co. Ltd. Cambodia, which
has been Land Rover’s authorized distributor since 2005, said he
looked forward to the competition Porsche would bring to the market. “We
welcome Porsche to come in. Audi, BMW. Let them come in, let there be
competition,” he said.
Mr. Gundersen added that Porsche’s decision to come to Cambodia
shows that the country is prospering. “It’s a question about the
development of a country itself,” he said.
“Everybody is getting richer,” he added.
But Khem Ley, a social development research consultant, said
Porsche’s soon-to-be presence was not so much a sign of overall economic
growth as an indication of the growing gap between rich and poor.
“The poverty gap is very, very big,” Mr. Ley said, noting that the
country’s wealth is concentrated in urban areas, where only a small
proportion of population lives.
“Very few people are gaining from this…15 percent of the people are getting the benefits of the economic growth,” he said.
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