Oh you do!
Well you can buy this.....
Lamborghini Veneno Roadster is (allegedly) for sale
Slightly used, a lot more expensive.
Lamborghini's genius strategy of offering short-run, massive-profit cars is so financially attractive that Ferrari is finally biting their flavor and doing likewise next month. The Lambos in question are cars you know and love: the track-only Sesto Elemento, the stealth-fighter-inspired Reventón, and the flag-wavy Veneno.
The Veneno coupe is the rarest of all, with just three customer cars built in addition to the "#0" car that Lambo held onto. The subsequent Veneno Roadster saw a production run of nine cars, each of which carried a $4.5-million price tag. Naturally, they sold out. But fret not—as our friends at Motor Authority report, one of the nine has hit the secondary market. Well...at least the listing claims that to be the case.
It's posted for sale at Mobile.de (the same site that's listing Arnold Schwarzenegger's fantastic Unimog) for $7.4 million including the 19% VAT—or just $3 million over "sticker" as it were. Here's the issue—the listing only shows the original gray Geneva Motor Show coupe, saying the shots are "examples" only. Given that the Berlin-based seller says that the car is "immediately available", why not just show the damned thing?
Well you can buy this.....
Lamborghini Veneno Roadster is (allegedly) for sale
Slightly used, a lot more expensive.
Lamborghini's genius strategy of offering short-run, massive-profit cars is so financially attractive that Ferrari is finally biting their flavor and doing likewise next month. The Lambos in question are cars you know and love: the track-only Sesto Elemento, the stealth-fighter-inspired Reventón, and the flag-wavy Veneno.
The Veneno coupe is the rarest of all, with just three customer cars built in addition to the "#0" car that Lambo held onto. The subsequent Veneno Roadster saw a production run of nine cars, each of which carried a $4.5-million price tag. Naturally, they sold out. But fret not—as our friends at Motor Authority report, one of the nine has hit the secondary market. Well...at least the listing claims that to be the case.
It's posted for sale at Mobile.de (the same site that's listing Arnold Schwarzenegger's fantastic Unimog) for $7.4 million including the 19% VAT—or just $3 million over "sticker" as it were. Here's the issue—the listing only shows the original gray Geneva Motor Show coupe, saying the shots are "examples" only. Given that the Berlin-based seller says that the car is "immediately available", why not just show the damned thing?
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