Bugatti Merges With EV Hyper Car Maker Rimac, and That's a Good Thing

Corey Lewis
by Corey Lewis

We reported last fall how Volkswagen-owned Bugatti had its future products on hold, given the financially turbulent and awful year which was 2020. In addition to the global pandemic cutting production, sales, profits, and everything else, VW was pouring lots of development money into its I.D. electric vehicle lineup.

At the time, there were mumblings that EV startup Rimac was in talks to purchase the brand from VW. News broke yesterday of a merger, where Volkswagen and Porsche are not entirely out of the picture.

A 10-year-old firm started by one man in his garage, Rimac is a Croatian producer of incredibly powerful electric hypercars. In the July 5th announcement, the company celebrated its merger and debuted its new holding company structure. Within the new Rimac Group are Bugatti Rimac and Rimac Technology, the former being the brand that produces the cars. The firm will be lead by Rimac CEO and founder Mate Rimac.

Rimac Technology is 100 percent owned by Rimac Group, and the Bugatti Rimac branch has split share ownership: Fifty-five percent is owned by Rimac Group (the controlling stake) while 45 percent is owned by Porsche. As shown above, major holders of the Rimac Group include Mate Rimac at 37 percent, Porsche at 24 percent, Hyundai at 12 percent, and other mixed investors at 27 percent. The Taycan appears in the announcement photos so you ain’t be forgetting how Porsche owns their piece of the pie here.

Rimac Technology is a newly-minted firm that develops and produces various battery systems, components, and drivetrains. In the deal Rimac Technology is an independent entity, doing its own thing. Entity separation makes distribution to other companies easier, for example if Hyundai wanted some Rimac tech in its EVs. The brands will retain their production facilities separately, too. Rimacs are made in Zagreb, Croatia, and Bugattis are produced at Molsheim, France. Development of Rimac and Bugatti vehicles will take place in the near future at a singular global HQ, a new 100,000 square-meter campus scheduled to open in 2023.

While Bugatti’s product has been on hold, Rimac recently released its newest hypercar. Called Nevera, it has some truly ridiculous specs. Driven at all four wheels by magnetic motors, Nevera has a total of 1,914 horsepower, and 1,740 lb-ft of torque. This instantaneous Rare Ride accelerates to 60 in 1.85 seconds, and on to 100 in 4.3 seconds. 186 miles per hour is reached in 9.3 seconds (good grief!) and the top speed is 258 miles per hour.

Those sorts of power and torque figures best gasoline-powered Bugattis several times over. The merger will allow Volkswagen-Porsche (they own one another, remember) to have a piece of Bugatti while someone else does the costly EV development. Given gasoline-powered hypercars are looking more and more dinosaur-y by the day, this type of merger makes perfect sense. In a low-volume, high-dollar hyper EV brand it’s best to turn the reigns over to a specialist, and that’s what Volkswagen has done here. Look for a Rare Rides on the Nevera very soon.

[Images: Bugatti Rimac]

Corey Lewis
Corey Lewis

Interested in lots of cars and their various historical contexts. Started writing articles for TTAC in late 2016, when my first posts were QOTDs. From there I started a few new series like Rare Rides, Buy/Drive/Burn, Abandoned History, and most recently Rare Rides Icons. Operating from a home base in Cincinnati, Ohio, a relative auto journalist dead zone. Many of my articles are prompted by something I'll see on social media that sparks my interest and causes me to research. Finding articles and information from the early days of the internet and beyond that covers the little details lost to time: trim packages, color and wheel choices, interior fabrics. Beyond those, I'm fascinated by automotive industry experiments, both failures and successes. Lately I've taken an interest in AI, and generating "what if" type images for car models long dead. Reincarnating a modern Toyota Paseo, Lincoln Mark IX, or Isuzu Trooper through a text prompt is fun. Fun to post them on Twitter too, and watch people overreact. To that end, the social media I use most is Twitter, @CoreyLewis86. I also contribute pieces for Forbes Wheels and Forbes Home.

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  • NeilM NeilM on Jul 06, 2021

    Note that there are two “Porsches.” One is the car brand, an operating division of VW AG. The other is Porsche SE, a holding company that owns 53.3% of VW AG. Porsche SE is 50% owned by the various Porsche and Piëch family members, but since the remaining shares are non-voting, the holding company is effectively controlled by the families. So which Porsche is taking an ownership position in Rimac, I wonder?

  • EBFlex EBFlex on Jul 06, 2021

    This is most definitely not a good thing. I see this to Bugatti being completely ruined as they cave to the EV fashion market of 4 wheeled compliance vehicles.

    • See 2 previous
    • Art Vandelay Art Vandelay on Jul 07, 2021

      @EBFlex Yeah, because Bugatti is in the compliance vehicle business lol. And there is a difference between an enthusiast and a shill and frankly a cheese d!ck for that matter.

  • Kwi65728132 Nothing surprising here, give a company an inch and they'll take a mile (and your data)...If it bothers someone that their "connected" car is spying on them then maybe they should make a tin foil hat for their car, or buy an older car without connected tech or old enough that the connected tech can no longer phone home due to that generation of cellular service being turned off; my 2014 Hyundai is no longer connected as 3G service has been turned off as of last year and so far, car manufacturers have not clued in on the idea of a common interface standard for cellular modems so upgrades in wireless service would be plug and play.Not that being able to remotely start your car from 10,000 miles away was a smart idea anyway.
  • Dartman Blah blah blah. Methinks some people doth protest too much; hiding something? If it really bothers you so much follow John Prine’s sage advice: “Blow up your TVThrow away your paperGo to the (another?) countryBuild you a homePlant a little gardenEat a lot of peachesTry an' find Jesus on your own"
  • Bd2 Please highlight the styling differences.
  • ToolGuy @Matt, not every post needs to solve *ALL* the world's problems.As a staunch consumer advocate, you might be more effective by focusing on one issue at a time and offering some concrete steps for your readers to take.When you veer off into all directions you lose focus and attention.(Free advice, worth what you paid for it, maybe even more.)
  • FreedMike What this article shows is that there are insufficient legal protections against unreasonable search and seizure. That’s not news. But what are automakers supposed to do when presented with a warrant or subpoena – tell the court to stuff it in the name of consumer privacy? If the cops come to an automaker and say, “this kid was abducted by a perv who’s a six time loser on the sex offender list and we need the location of the abductor’s car,” do they say “sorry, Officer, the perv’s privacy rights have to be protected”?This is a different problem than selling your data.
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