Warning: If you are a poor Nigerian, do not read this story because you gotta cry!
(Reuters)
– Nigeria’s super rich are no strangers to conspicuous consumption, and
there’s no better way to flaunt your wealth than by buying a brand new
European sports car.
German
carmaker Porsche officially opened a new car dealership on Friday in
the heart of Lagos’ wealthiest district, Victoria Island, a place with
one of the world’s highest concentrations of millionaires.
There
are already dealerships specialising in Aston Martin and Lamborghini,
but Porsche hopes to capitalise on a promise of providing sturdier
vehicles that can cope with Nigeria’s rough roads. Its presence is being
seen as a vote of confidence in the West African nation’s fast-growing
economy.
Porsche
also plans to set up an operation in the capital Abuja, where roads are
newly built – a better market for the 911 sports model – and where
politicians are amongst the world’s most highly paid.
“The
African continent, and in particular Nigeria, is of growing importance
to us at Porsche,” the company’s Middle East and Africa head George
Wills said, unveiling the new 911 model.
High-end
goods producers are increasingly targeting sub-Saharan Africa, as its
economic growth starts to dwarf other continents and rich Western
countries face a slowdown.
Nigeria, Africa’s second biggest economy, grew 7.68 percent in the last quarter of 2011, one of the fastest in the world.
Two of Africa’s top five richest men are Nigerian.
“We’re
quite confident the numbers will be strong,” Wills told Reuters in
front of the new 911 sports car, after a Porsche official revved its
engine for flashing cameras.
“It’s difficult to put a finite number on it, but certainly enough to give a return on this investment,” he added.
Porsche
Nigeria general manager Julian Hardy estimates 200 Nigerians own
Porsches – the dealership had been running prior to the official launch
since July and sold an undisclosed number, and rich Nigerians have been
importing them for decades.
THE RICHER RICH
At
a party to celebrate Porsche’s launch, Nigerians in sharp suits and
cocktail dresses drank martinis and danced around the 911 display model
to live music.
“You
can drive around Lagos … then take your car to the race track and
become a beast and go wild,” said Emmanuel Ngala, an IT consultant who
owns a Cayenne 4×4 and is buying a 911.
The
firm’s sales target for 2012 is 100 cars, and it hopes to hit a stable
sales rate of around 300 a year, compared with 800 in South Africa.
Average prices currently range between 21 million naira ($133,000) to 30
million naira ($190,000).
The
oil wealth of Africa’s biggest producer has made multi-millionaires of
its elite in the past few decades, even while absolute poverty has
increased to 60 percent of the population.
Lagos
embraces some of Africa’s most expensive real estate alongside some of
its most crowded slums. On one street, a Hummer drives past a tramp
sifting through a dustbin.
The car park at the Porsche show rooms has several models.
“It’s
a nice car,” said employee Mohammed Ibrahim, as he hosed down a chrome
coloured Cayenne and shined it to a sparkle with a cloth. On his 20,000
naira a month salary it would take him 125 years to afford one if he
didn’t buy anything else.
“God might give me a car like this one day. He can do that, if he wants to. He can do anything,” he said, grinning.
BIG MEN AND MOTORS
Sandwiched
between the lagoon that led Portuguese sailors to name this city
‘Lagos’ and the Atlantic, Victoria Island is a place of fund managers in
fine woollen suits and oil oligarchs.
The faces of glamorous women smile from billboards advertising mobile phones. Luxury 4x4s are everywhere.
But
it has scant electricity, most roads are sandy, potholed and patrolled
by beggars in rags. Poor drainage means they flood – in the rainy
season, fishermen sometimes traverse them by canoe, raising doubts about
the practicality of sports cars like a 911.
Other
luxury brands have however made it big in Nigeria. It is a significant
African market for LVMH. Most bars can get you Moet & Chandon
champagne or Hennessy brandy, which women sip next to their Louis
Vuitton handbags.
The “Auto Lounge” in Victoria Island lets you enjoy an expensive drink overlooking a garage of Aston Martins.
Paris-based
magazine Jeune Afrique last year placed Nigeria at the top of Africa’s
champagne consumers, guzzling 593,000 bottles in 2010, 50 percent more
than richer rival South Africa
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