This video analyzes how Porsche, once the gold standard of automotive engineering, suffered a $1.1 billion loss and 50% stock crash in 2025 due to a single disruptive vehicle—the electric 718. The video traces Porsche's history of being disrupted by external forces: the Ford GT40 in 1966 forced them to build the 917, the Mazda 787B in 1991 ended their Group C monopoly, and the Nissan GT-R in 2008 challenged their mechanical dominance. However, the 2025 crisis was unique because the disruptor came from within—Porsche's own electric 718, which failed due to supply chain issues with Northvolt, forcing the company to abandon their 80% EV goal and create a product crater. The lesson demonstrates that even the most prestigious brands can be destroyed by their own strategic misalignment and hubris, and that true engineering authority requires the ferocity of response to disruption.
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How One Car Actually Destroyed Porsche (The $1.1 Billion Mistake)Indexé :
How One Car Actually Destroyed Porsche (The $1.1 Billion Mistake) Porsche is the gold standard of automotive engineering. They are the most profitable, the most precise, and the most storied brand in the world. But right now, the legend is bleeding. In 2025, Porsche reported a staggering $1.1 billion loss and a 50% crash in stock value. This wasn't a slow decline—it was caused by a single, disastrous decision. From the historical "assassins" like the Ford GT40 and the Nissan GT-R that forced Porsche to evolve, to the one modern car that created a "product crater" and forced 1,900 layoffs, we’re diving deep into the anatomy of disruption. Is the "No Substitute" era officially over? Let's talk about it. --- 01:14 -Section 1: The Brute Force of the GT40 01:14 -Section 2: The Rotary Scream - Mazda 787B 04:41 -Section 3: Godzilla and the Nürburgring War 06:42 -Section 4: The Chinese Disruption - Xiaomi SU7 07:54 -Section 5: The Killing Blow - The Electric 718 Crisis 07:54 -Conclusion: The Phoenix or the Fossil? -------------------------------------------------------------- 💼• For business inquiries, copyright matters or other inquiries please contact us at: yt.porschify@gmail.com -------------------------------------------------------------- ⚠️ Copyright Disclaimer • This video makes use of images, clips, and other content under the principles of Fair Use as outlined in Section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Act. • Section 107 permits limited use of copyrighted material for purposes such as criticism, commentary, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research—without requiring prior authorization from the copyright owner. • Some copyrighted media (including video, images, or audio) may appear in this video. Such use is transformative and non-commercial, and we believe it to be lawful under the Fair Use doctrine. If you are the copyright holder and have concerns, please reach out, and we will address the matter promptly. ------------------------------------------------------ “This video uses an AI-generated voice for narration.” ------------------------------------------------------
Imagine a world where the words German engineering meant nothing. A world where the most prestigious sports car [music] manufacturer on the planet, a brand built on decades of Le Man's dominance and the no substitute ethos, was suddenly, publicly, and embarrassingly humbled. For most of us, Porsche is the invincibility brand. They are the ones who show up to the Nurburgg ring and set the bar so high that everyone else just goes home. But history tells a different story. It's a story of one car. It's several key turning points. A single vehicle has emerged to dismantle Porsche's technical paradigm, their marketing narrative, or their financial stability. Sometimes it's a car from a rival. Sometimes it's a car from a phone company. And most recently, it's a car Porsche built themselves. A car that triggered a wild corporate meltdown, a 50% stock crash and a staggering $1.1 billion loss in just three months.
Today, we're looking at the anatomy of disruption. We're looking at how one car destroyed Porsche.
To understand how we got to the current crisis, we have to go back to 1966.
At that time, Porsche was the underdog.
They were the kings of efficiency. They built small displacement lightweight cars like the 9006 that dominated their class. They were content with class wins, leaving the overall glory to the big boys. Then came the Ford GT40.
Henry Ford II didn't care about class wins. He wanted to humiliate Enzo Ferrari, but Porsche was caught in the crossfire. Ford showed up at Lemons with a massive 7.0 L V8. It was a NASCAR engine in a European rapper. The European establishment laughed. They said it wouldn't last 24 hours, but the laughter died when the GT40s hit 215 mph on the Mulsan [music] Straight.
Porschee's 9006 was a masterpiece of aerodynamics, but it was being passed like it was standing still. Ford's 123 finish in 1966 didn't just beat Ferrari.
It destroyed Porsche's efficiency paradigm. It proved that in the new era of endurance racing, brute force was the new precision. The man who felt this burn [music] most was a young 28-year-old named Ferdinand Pekk. He realized that if Porsche stayed small, they would die. [music] This destruction of their old identity led to project 917, the most dangerous, expensive, [music] and legendary car Porsche ever made. They had to use secretaries and office workers to assemble 25 cars in 3 weeks just to pass inspection. It [music] was a desperate response to a singular disruptor.
Fast forward to 1991.
Porsche had become the establishment.
[music] The Porsche 962 was the workhorse of Group C. If you wanted to win, you bought a 962. [music] It was reliable. It was fast. It was predictable. Then a screaming orange and green blur arrived from Japan, the Mazda 787B. [music] This is where the destruction gets technical. Mazda's team principal Takayoshi Ohashi [music] found a loophole. While Porsche's 962C was forced to carry 1,000 kg of weight under the new regulations, Mazda successfully lobbyed the officials to let their rotary engine run at just 830 kg. That 170 kg difference was the death of the 962. The Mazda could break later, corner harder, and use less fuel. Porsche started that race with 13 cars on the grid. Mazda had three. By the final hours, the Porsches were plagued by cooling leaks and mechanical stress from the extra weight. The Mazda 55, powered by a quad rotor engine that sounded like a banshee, took the lead. Johnny Herbert drove so hard he collapsed from [music] dehydration the moment he crossed the finish line. One car had just proved that Porsche's reliability through overengineering could be bypassed by strategic agility. Porsche's Group C monopoly [music] was over.
If those were racing stories, the next one was personal. In 2008, [music] the world of performance cars was changed forever by a car nicknamed Godzilla, the Nissan GTR R35. [music] Nissan didn't just want to build a fast car. They wanted to dismantle the 911 Turbo. In May 2008, [music] Nissan announced a lap time of 7 minutes and 29 seconds at the Nurburgg Ring. [music] It was 3 seconds faster than the 911 GT2 and significantly faster than the Turbo.
Porsche's response, they didn't just disagree, they accused Nissan of cheating. Porsche's product chief, August Alightener, went on the record saying this wonder car couldn't have been stock. Porsche was so salty that they actually went out and bought their own GT-R from a dealership in the US and flew it to Germany. Their test drivers took it out and the best they could do was a 754. They publicly called Nissan fibbers. But then came the rebuttal that humiliated Stoutgard. Nissan pointed out that the GTR had two tire options, the regular Bridgestones and the Dunlops.
Porsche had tested the car on Bridgestones. The Dunlops were [music] 5 seconds faster. Then Nissan dropped the ultimate insult. They offered Porsche's test drivers free driving training because apparently the German engineers didn't understand how to use Nissan's advanced all-wheel drive system. The GTR destroyed the myth of the Porsche chassis engineer as the final arbiter of performance. It proved that digital integration, software, sensors, and torque vectoring could beat mechanical heritage. And the kicker, it did it for half the price. It forced Porsche to accelerate the development of the PDK dual clutch and the 918 Spider just to reclaim their dignity.
We often think of the threat to Porsche coming from Ferrari or McLaren. But today, the threat is coming from a company that makes smartphones. In China, Porsche's most important market, a revolution is happening, the Xiaomi SU7 Ultra. Last year, Porsche's sales in China tanked by 28%. [music] Why? Because younger buyers don't care about Steve McQueen or the 1970s. They want [music] tech. They want AI. And they want a car that can beat a Porsche for $100,000 less. The SU7 Ultra recently lapped the Shanghai International Circuit 1.5 seconds faster than the Porsche Tyan Turbo GT. It lapped the Nurburg Ring 20 seconds faster than the Porsche. Think about that. A firsttime car manufacturer from the tech industry just walked onto the world's most difficult track and deleted Porsche's records. This isn't just a lap time. It's a market share massacre. In China, Tyan deliveries have almost halfed. One car, the SU7, has turned Porsche from a status symbol into legacy tech.
But the most dangerous car to Porsche right now isn't made by Nissan or Xiaomi. It's a car Porsche is building themselves.
The electric 718. For decades, the Boxster and Cayman, the 718 platform, were the entry point to the brand. They were the cars that pure enthusiasts loved because they were mid-enineed and lightweight. But Porsche decided to go allin on an electric version. This decision has become the biggest disaster in the company's 90-year history. In 2025, Porsche reported a quarterly loss of 1.1 billion.
Let that sink in. A company that usually has a 14% profit margin saw it drop to 0.2%.
Their stock price crashed by 50%.
[music] Why? Because they put all their eggs in the EV basket and the basket broke.
Their lead battery supplier, Northvolt, went bankrupt. Porsche was left with a half-finished car and no batteries. They had to scrap internal projects and terminate factory contracts. To save the company, they've had to announce the cutting of 1,900 permanent jobs. But here is the real destruction. In a moment of sheer corporate hubris, Porsche stopped production of the gasoline 718 in October 2025 to make room for the electric one. But since the electric one is delayed and failing, Porsche now has a product crater. They have no entry-level sports cars for sale. They've surrendered their home turf. They've abandoned their 80% EV goal. They are now desperately trying to hack internal combustion engines back into platforms that were supposed to be EV only. One car, the electric 718, has destroyed Porsche's strategic roadmap and their financial safety net.
The history of Porsche is a cycle of destruction and rebirth. The Ford GT40 destroyed their small engine era which forced them to build the 917.
The Nissan GTR destroyed their mechanical arrogance which forced them to build the 918 Spider. The Tesla and Xiaomi insurgency destroyed their EV dominance leading to the TYON Turbo GT.
But the 2025 crisis is different. This time, the one car that destroyed Porsche came from within. It was born of a boardroom's obsession with growth and a disconnect from their core fans who just wanted a flat 6 engine and a manual gearbox.
Porsche is currently in crisis mode. New leadership is in. Software teams are being overhauled and the electric 718 is being re-evaluated. Is Porsche dead? No.
[music] Porsche is an engineering firm that happens to sell cars. They have survived the oil crisis of the 70s and the financial ruin of the '90s. But the no substitute brand finally found a substitute and it was a multi-billion dollar reality check. True engineering authority isn't about never failing.
It's about the ferocity of the response.
[music] Porsche has been knocked down before and usually when they get back up, they have a car that changes the world. But for now, the message is clear. Whether it's an American V8, a Japanese rotary, or a smartphone on wheels, no one is safe, not even Porsche. Thanks for watching. If you enjoyed this deep dive into automotive history and corporate drama, hit that like button. It really helps the channel. I'll see you in the next
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