News

by Sam Smith · The Race · Jan 9
News
Dispelling the myths of an impressive Formula E record

Why Porsche's Formula E car owns Mexico City—and what that tells you about real engineering

Porsche isn't just fast at Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez. The high-altitude circuit exposes which teams actually understand their powertrains versus which ones are running software patches. Here's where the 99X Electric's efficiency advantage isn't marketing—it's physics.

Formula E stopped being about racing in 2014 and became an energy-management simulator. Porsche's winning because they treat it like engineering, not like a spec series.

by Adam Ismail · The Drive · Jan 9
News
The Porsche 911 Now Starts $40,000 Higher Than It Did Five Years Ago

Porsche 911 Pricing Has Become Absurd—$40K Bump in Five Years

The 992-generation 911 now starts at $140K, up $8K alone for 2026. This isn't inflation—it's Porsche testing how much devotion actually costs. When base models approach six figures, you're no longer selling cars; you're selling membership to a club that's priced out everyone who remembers when 911s were attainable.

The 992 is turning into what the air-cooled 911s became: a financial asset first, a driving experience second.

by bringatrailer · Bring a Trailer · Jan 9
News
BaT Auction Success Story: Irony Comes in Black

Jeremy Clarkson's Fault: How a 2001 Boxster S Led to Winning a 1985 911 Carrera Targa

A BaT member's impulse auction win—sparked by Clarkson-induced 911 fever—landed them a clean 1985 Porsche 911 Carrera Targa. The story cuts through typical auction theater to show how impulse and brand loyalty still drive the market for air-cooled 911s, even when you already own perfectly capable modern Porsche iron.

The real irony isn't owning two Porsches. It's that a Boxster S still makes more sense on a road you actually drive, but the 911 Targa will hold its value while you justify the purchase to yourself.

by Hank O'Hop · HotCars · Jan 9
News
Chevy Built A Rear-Engined Flat-Six Sports Car Before Porsche

Chevrolet's Rear-Engine Flat-Six Was Porsche's Forgotten Predecessor

The Chevrolet Corvair (1960-1969) beat the 911 to market with a rear-mounted flat-six, but Chevy's engineering gamble came with a steering behavior that made it genuinely dangerous in untrained hands. While Porsche refined the concept into something manageable, the Corvair became a cautionary tale about how good ideas can get weaponized by poor execution.

The Corvair proves that being first means nothing if your suspension geometry wants to kill the driver—Porsche's engineering obsession made all the difference.

Autocar UK · Jan 9
News
Alfa Romeo bespoke arm reveals wild Giulia Quadrifoglio Luna Rossa

Alfa's Bottegafuoriserie Built the Giulia QV We Actually Want—Luna Rossa Shows What Bespoke Division Gets Right

Alfa Romeo's new custom shop dropped a Quadrifoglio with serious aero work: low-drag bodykit, split rear wing, and enough attention to detail that it feels less like marketing exercise and more like someone actually cared. This is what happens when you let engineers play instead of product planners.

Bespoke divisions are either vanity projects or they're proof the mothership finally trusts someone to build the thing they should've built stock.

by bringatrailer · Bring a Trailer · Jan 9
News
47k-Mile 2010 Porsche Boxster S 6-Speed

47k-Mile 2010 Boxster S 6-Speed: When the Budget Porsche Finally Makes Sense

This cream white 987.2 Boxster S is the manual-transmission variant that nobody bought new but everyone wants now. 3.4-liter flat-six, six-speed stick, natural cocoa leather—the kind of spec that reads like a checklist of what actually matters. Low miles and proper equipment make this the Porsche that ages better than its depreciation curve suggests.

The 987 Boxster S finally stopped being the punchline. Clean manuals are vanishing, prices have stabilized, and it's genuinely the last affordable Porsche that still feels like one.

by bringatrailer · Bring a Trailer · Jan 9
News
1971 DeTomaso Pantera

1971 DeTomaso Pantera Chassis 02210: 20 Years in Storage, Finally Waking Up

This 1971 Pantera spent two decades asleep in a garage before hitting the market—the kind of time capsule that separates survivors from driven cars. Original McCormick Lincoln-Mercury delivery out of Trenton, repainted red in 1985, now carrying that patina-with-purpose look that matters. The Cleveland 351C engine is still in there waiting to remember what it was built for.

Pantera values are finally moving north because people realized Ford's mid-engine experiment actually worked—and now everyone's scared there won't be another one.

by bringatrailer · Bring a Trailer · Jan 8
News
1999 Porsche 911 Carrera Coupe 6-Speed

1999 Porsche 911 Carrera 6-Speed: The M96 Era Nobody Asked For But Everyone's Buying

A black-on-Savanna 996 Carrera with the reviled M96 flat-six and a six-speed manual—the exact combination that spent two decades as a punchline before prices decided otherwise. 18" Turbos, sunroof, and all the '90s creature comforts intact. Values have quietly reversed on these; clean examples are moving.

The 996 M96 spent 15 years as the car your uncle warned you about. Now they're $25k asks on BaT and people are actually clicking.

by bringatrailer · Bring a Trailer · Jan 8
News
2002 Porsche 911 Turbo Coupe at No Reserve

2002 Porsche 911 Turbo (996): TechArt Widow's Peak and a Tiptronic Nobody Asked For

This 996 Turbo wears the full TechArt cosmetic treatment—body kit, rear wing, modern wheels—but here's the catch: it's stuck with the five-speed Tiptronic automatic. The 3.6L twin-turbo flat-six makes the power, sure, but you're experiencing it through a transmission that makes rowing gears feel quaint by comparison. No reserve auctions on 996 Turbos are where reality meets collector pricing.

The 996 Turbo finally stopped being the forgotten middle child, but modded examples still trade at a discount to unmolested cars—which tells you everything about market hierarchy.

by bringatrailer · Bring a Trailer · Jan 8
News
2.4L-Powered 1972 Porsche 914

2.4L Flat-Six 914: When Porsche's Unloved Kid Gets a Real Engine

This 1972 914 ditches the original 2.0L air-cooled four for a proper 2.4-liter flat-six backed by a 915 five-speed—the engine swap that finally made these mid-engine orphans feel like real Porsches. Steel GT bodywork, carbon-fiber targa, and a custom interior suggest someone actually drove this thing instead of treating it as a resto-mod poster child. Clean 914s with real powerplants are becoming harder to source.

The 914 is finally getting its due, mostly because people realized you can turn it into something worth owning instead of just tolerating.

by bringatrailer · Bring a Trailer · Jan 8
News
21k-Mile 2012 Porsche 911 Carrera 4 GTS Cabriolet

21k-Mile 2012 Porsche 911 Carrera 4 GTS Cabriolet—The 997 That Actually Appreciated

A low-mileage 997.2 GTS drop-top with Sport Chrono Plus and full-boat options hits the market. Two owners, comprehensive service history, and the kind of spec that suggests someone knew exactly what they were building. This generation finally got its due after years of living in the shadow of the 991.

The 997 GTS is the last Porsche that felt like it was engineered for drivers instead of spreadsheets—values prove it.

by Danie Botha · CarBuzz · Jan 8
News
Misha Charoudin Gives His Take On The Mind-Blowing Xiaomi Nürburgring Lap

Xiaomi's SU7 Ultra Just Humbled Porsche and Rimec at The Ring

A smartphone maker showed up to the Nürburgring with an EV and walked away with the fastest lap in its class—beating both the Rimec C_Two and Porsche Taycan. The SU7 Ultra's 1,121 hp and sub-7-minute ring time signal that Chinese EVs have stopped being novelties and started being threats.

When a phone company builds a faster ring car than two established hypercar makers, the market just tilted. This isn't marketing—it's a skill gap.

by Johnny Puckett · Motorious · Jan 8
News
Egyptian-Backed Investors Hold Talks to Acquire Porsche Stake in Bugatti Venture

Porsche's Bugatti Rimac Stake Up for Grabs as Egyptian Money Circles

Porsche is in talks to offload its ownership stake in Bugatti Rimac to Egyptian-backed investors in a deal potentially worth over €1 billion. The move signals another shift in the hypercar maker's ownership structure, following years of attempts to stabilize the brand after the Rimac merger. It's a reminder that even when you're building €3 million hypercars, the money men still call the shots.

When ownership keeps changing hands this fast, the cars are interesting but the company's a mess—and that matters for anyone stupid enough to buy one used.

by John Dagys · Sportscar365 · Jan 8
News
Diuguid: Performance Not Factor in Three-Driver Daytona Decision

Porsche Penske's Three-Driver Daytona Call: Strategy Over Pace

Porsche Penske's decision to run three-driver lineups at Daytona wasn't about driver performance—it was a calculated strategic move. The team opted for roster depth over raw pace from Newgarden and McLaughlin, signaling how endurance racing rewards planning over outright qualifying speed.

Endurance racing has always been about chess, not drag racing. Porsche just admitted it out loud.

by bringatrailer · Bring a Trailer · Jan 8
News
2007 Porsche 911 Turbo Coupe 6-Speed

2007 Porsche 911 Turbo 6-Speed Manual: Black on Black Gets the Auction Treatment

A 997-generation 911 Turbo coupe finished in black leather with the Sport Chrono package and a six-speed manual—the transmission combination that matters. Factory twin-turbo 3.6L flat-six, AWD, CEC wheels. This is the last of the air-cooled-adjacent generation before Porsche went full electric assist.

Manual 997 Turbos are finally getting recognized as the sweet spot between analog 996 chaos and 991 computer-mediated precision. Values haven't collapsed like base 911s, but they're patient cars if you're not chasing hype.

by Johnny Puckett · Motorious · Jan 8
News
Porsche Dream Giveaway Returns With 2024 Cayman GT4 RS as Grand Prize

Porsche Dream Giveaway Returns With 2024 Cayman GT4 RS

The 718 GT4 RS is finally getting recognition as the last naturally-aspirated 4.0L flat-six Porsche will make for the masses—a 493-hp machine that'll hold value precisely because it refuses to follow the turbo trend. Paired with a high-end lift, this is the kind of prize that actually matters to people who build.

Porsche's giving away one of the few cars from their lineup that won't depreciate into the used market within three years.

by bringatrailer · Bring a Trailer · Jan 8
News
19k-Mile 2004 Porsche 911 Carrera 4S Coupe 6-Speed

19k-Mile 2004 Porsche 911 Carrera 4S: The Showroom Queen That Actually Stayed Garage-Kept

A 996-generation Carrera 4S coupe with negligible miles and a museum-quality provenance—spent its first years on display before landing in private hands. Slate Grey over black leather, factory Sport Techno wheels, and a 6-speed manual make this a clean example of 2004 Porsche restraint. Prices on low-mileage 996s have steadied after years of appreciation, and this sits at the intersection of collectibility and actual drivability.

The 996 finally stopped getting dunked on. This is the spec that proves it—understated color, manual trans, genuinely low miles. Don't overthink it.

by bringatrailer · Bring a Trailer · Jan 8
News
62 BaT Auctions Closing Today

62 BaT Lots Closing Today: 2.9L Carrera RS, 512 TR, and the Truck Renaissance

Today's Bring a Trailer slate spans the full spectrum—from air-cooled 911s to family-kept '51 GMC pickups to a fresh 992 GT3 RS still wearing dealer plates. The trucks are the real story here: vintage F-250s and Dodges are moving on no reserve, a sign the market finally remembers that 1970s iron holds its own against euro exotica. One eye on the Ferrari 512 TR; Euro cars from that era are getting their due.

BaT's truck presence has quietly become the most honest meter of collector priorities—when 45-year-family-owned pickups outsell hype cycles, the market's telling you something real.

by Brad Anderson · Carscoops · Jan 8
News
This EV Isn’t A Porsche, But It Sure Wants You To Think It Is

SAIC's Z7 Wagon Is Now Testing—The Taycan Homage Gets Practical

SAIC's Z7 doesn't hide what it's doing: wagon body language lifted straight from Porsche's playbook, undercut pricing that makes the Taycan look premium, and now a stretched cargo version spotted in testing. Chinese EV makers have moved past homage into straight iteration—and it works.

When your design language is this close to the Taycan, you're not competing on innovation. You're betting that good enough, cheaper, and with more storage is enough. For most buyers, it probably is.

Autocar UK · Jan 8
News
Debate settled: We name every car maker's best model of all time

Every manufacturer's peak, ranked—and yes, the arguments are worse than you'd think

Autocar's staff went to war over which model defined each marque. From the MG ZT-T 260's sleeper credibility to whether a 911 variant beats the 356, they're parsing the real difference between good and generational. The gap between what journalists remember and what the market actually values keeps widening.

Ranking 'best ever' by brand is content comfort food—safe, divisive, and missing the point. The real story isn't the pick, it's that half these manufacturers peaked 15 years ago and everyone knows it.

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