rafiki_
Well-Known Member
Unlikely, as they have a growing relationship with Honda.Nissan is about to go down globally
Unlikely, as they have a growing relationship with Honda.Nissan is about to go down globally
Unlikely, as they have a growing relationship with Honda.
Unlikely, as they have a growing relationship with Honda.
I was about to say that.talks between them have collapsed.
BUilding cars inthe uk has been fraught with challenges since brexit. Can't see this continuing...I was about to say that.
Honda realized that Nissan’s multi billion dollar debt would sink them as well
I don’t know if this forum does reflect the UK boat market. It used to but I think a lot of the people on here bought their boats quite some time ago. The person who’s going to buy one of the British boats probably sold their business or has managed to find a niche somewhere that pays well. They may even be buying their first boat.Yes, this forum is a good reflection of the uk leisure boat market. I am guessing the average age of forumites is 65+, probably 70 ish.
Most of the regulars who posted when i joined in another guise in early 2000s have moved on and there is much less activity than there once was.
Currently sitting in our house near la trinité and the contrast in activity in february compared to the uk, ceratinly the east coast, is huge. Big racing fleet went out yesterday, lots of non race sailing boats went out and of course quite a few of the merry fisher peche promenade type motor boats. I doubt you would see one sailing boat on the Crouch yesterday, maybe a couple of fishing boats.
The other contrast is how many new boats are in the marina. Couple of new pogos, two of the new sunfast 36s just on one pontoon.
I think that the decline in uk leisure boating has been as big a factor in the decline of the uk boat industry as inefficient practices.
With £2-5m to spend you are looking in a very crowded market with some equally strong offerings from competing brands in the same category ... Alongside Princess you have Sunseeker, Ferretti, Riva, Itama, Azimut, Cranchi, Pearl, Prestige, Absolute, Pershing, and several others. If you want San Lorenzo quality and innovative use of space for less than £10m, then look at a Bluegame. If you're looking at the lower end of the price range, then you can add larger boats from Pardo and many other makers of open boats and sports cruisers. My point is not to rundown Princess or the quality of its boats, but in this price range there are lots of comparable alternatives and what is "best" depends on what you are looking for, what's important to you ... and in some cases where you are from
One of the challenges faced by all these manufacturers is that they have relentlessly pushed their products upmarket and into a price range which attracts a more limited number and a different type of buyer. If you look at the evolution of the tax paid price of a typical 55-60ft sports cruiser/flybridge it went from perhaps £0.5-0.7m in the early noughties, to £1m in 2010, £2m in 2020, and somewhere close to £3m today. Income and wealth has not increased in the same way, so you have a growing number of producers chasing a decreasing number of buyers, competing with each other on the basis of delivering ever increasing quality, more complex interior design, brand appeal and competitive pricing. Twenty five years ago, the typical purchaser might have been a knowlegable owner-operator boating enthusiast who had achieved some success in his or her business life and wanted to spend time on the water. Today, the target customer is just as likely to be multi-millionaire looking for a lifestyle purchase, often with little or no boating experience and dependent on a captain or maintenance company to look after the boat.
I don't really buy into the argument that the UK is somehow burdened by a cost disadvantage or the aftermath of Brexit. The competitors to Princess, Sunseeker and Fairline are predominantly in Italy and France, not the Far East. These countries are not renowned for their low cost manufacturing, flexible working practices, absence of bureaucracy or inherent efficiency. I know from personal experience. that the cost of shipment from the UK to the Med on a new boat is irrelevant ... less than 0.5% of the price ... and that the administrative hurdles are easily overcome. They're all buying the same components from Volvo Penta, MAN, etc. Currency can be an issue, but it is easily managed.
If you want to understand why the Italian and French builders of directly competing products make good money and those in the UK don't, you need look internally at their approach, working practices, investment in technology and the adoption of modern production methodologies. Unfortunately, while we posses the skills to make products as good as anyone in the world, too often the UK has a history of following rather than leading in these
Unfortunately as you have said, the only thing that doesn’t cost money to do is cutting out the > than 80 ft line (saves money). The cost of the changes needed to get costs under control ie change the manufacturing process are likely to be huge and in so doing may well piss off the “Princess” buyer ie the diehard P fans because you will simply lose some of the things that for example Henry likes, which creates a double blow until you rebuild sales. Personally I would never invest in certain industries - airplane manufacturing and boat manufacturing being top of that list. Huge consumers of cash and unless you mass manufacture or focus on billionaires the returns on capital invested are probably simply not worth it.100% agree. So Sunseeker and Princess need only do 2 things to flourish: concentrate on <80 feet and stop messing around above that (Princess in particular), and radically change their production (a MASSIVE project) including losing people who don't do much (maybe that's 3 things).
This will only be possible with entirely new management teams imho.
100% agree your whole post DAW, especially the bit above. Princess have got it all wrong with in-house parts manufacture, plywood models, ill-thought out model overlaps, etc etc.. However, there just seems to be something fundamentally wrong with the approach to manufacturing and the cost structure.
The interesting thing is that if you outsource I can see a raft of new businesses being created, probably by current employees, who end up being more efficient and potentially even export their skills beyond a single brand. A bit like the F1 motorsport model, we could even attract other brands into the UK. Initially people would see the change as negative but long term it might be a win win all round.100% agree your whole post DAW, especially the bit above. Princess have got it all wrong with in-house parts manufacture, plywood models, ill-thought out model overlaps, etc etc.
Notice in the Sanlorenzo info that you refer to, they have ballpark 900 employees and 1500 dedicated contractors. Incredible efficiency.
Henry, this is exact what I proposed to Sunseeker 10 years ago. Unfortunately they were unwilling to change at that point. The burning platform had not arisen. Maybe it will soon?The interesting thing is that if you outsource I can see a raft of new businesses being created, probably by current employees, who end up being more efficient and potentially even export their skills beyond a single brand. A bit like the F1 motorsport model, we could even attract other brands into the UK. Initially people would see the change as negative but long term it might be a win win all round.
Sanlorenzo have got it easy were they are, something which has been growing in Viareggio and surround areas (today it is from Pisa to Spezia) since the eighties.Notice in the Sanlorenzo info that you refer to, they have ballpark 900 employees and 1500 dedicated contractors. Incredible efficiency, and therefore a solid cash generative business. Princess -3000 employees and undisclosed contractor supply chain- haven't reliably generated cash in over a decade.
For those that don't know, EBITDA is generally regarded as the best measure of profit and gives a good approximation of free cash flow before investment and debt service.
I smiled at 'EBITDA is generally regarded as the best measure of profit and gives a good approximation of free cash flow before investment and debt service.' also.
Sounds like you need to get your bid in for Fairline, you've got it all worked out!I think @jfm has summed up the situation within this thread quite clearly and in an easy to digest format. Essentially don't try and do everything yourself, stick at what you're good at - ie. the design, all be it with a scaled down and more affordable budget. Allow suppliers to be experts in their field and deliver quality components on time for an affordable price. Vastly scale down your fixed costs and concentrate on key processes / assembly focusing on quality and component policing which is much easier when any issues don't cost you money. Finally stick to your core market. Don't try and sell stuff where others have a significant lead.
To answer my own question I'm going to say yes it does have a future, but it needs some fundamental changes. Can those changes take place without a significant event that re-sets things? I don't know. I certainly don't share the view that GB PLC is fundamentally broken. It occupies a good world wide marketing space, has the necessary technical infrastructure and is no more expensive than somewhere like Italy or France to operate from.
Not exactly an apples with apples comparison