
-
Police meet fresh 1,000-strong protest in Madagascar with tear gas
-
Sabalenka, with help from Djokovic, and Swiatek reach Wuhan quarters
-
Myanmar junta says it targeted rebels in deadly attack on protest
-
Home comforts beckon as under-fire Wirtz returns to Germany duty
-
Silver price hits decades high as gold rush eases
-
Laszlo Krasznahorkai: Hungary's 'master of apocalypse'
-
Monaco sack coach Hutter, line up Pocognoli: sources
-
500 US troops deploy in Chicago ahead of court hearing
-
Djokovic to meet 204th-ranked Vacherot in Shanghai Masters semi-final
-
UK-Balkans meet targets people-smuggling, Russian disinformation
-
Guillotine abolitionist Robert Badinter to enter France's Pantheon
-
Top conservation group meets in UAE on growing threats to nature
-
EU to probe alleged Hungarian spying
-
Mbappe 'relaxed' and ready to play in France's World Cup qualifiers
-
Hungary's Krasznahorkai, 'master of the apocalypse' wins literature Nobel
-
Danish wind giant Orsted to cut workforce by a quarter
-
Pope hails role of news agencies in 'post-truth', AI world
-
EU chief survives confidence votes in fractious parliament
-
Michelin Guide gets an appetite beyond restaurants
-
Hungary's Laszlo Krasznahorkai wins Nobel literature prize
-
Shein's Paris store kicks up a storm in France
-
Pope Leo puts poor, marginalised centre stage in first major text
-
French cycling sprinter Demare announces retirement
-
'They're coming back': Israelis await return of Gaza hostages
-
World no. 204 Vacherot stuns Rune to reach Shanghai semi-finals
-
India's Gill out to avoid 'mental fatigue' from constant cricket
-
NBA commissioner says 'tremendous interest' on return to China
-
EU woos developing nations at investment forum
-
Double world champion Rovanpera calls time on rally career
-
DR Congo leader urges Rwanda's Kagame to 'make peace' in Brussels encounter
-
Ferrari goes electric with four-seat coupe 'Elettrica'
-
Deschamps says adaptation the key to not becoming an 'old fool'
-
Trump hosts roundtable accusing 'sick' media of backing Antifa
-
'Let them live in peace': survivor's fight for uncontacted Amazon people
-
France hosts Arab, Europe ministers for talks on 'day after' Gaza war
-
French prosecutors seek 12-year term in Gisele Pelicot rape appeal
-
US sanctions hit Serbia's oil firm
-
Schauffele, Morikawa struggle at blustery Baycurrent Classic
-
Nobel literature buzz tips Western author
-
Markets mixed as traders eye AI rally, US rates and shutdown
-
Ruthless Sabalenka races into Wuhan quarters after Djokovic boost
-
'Sending you love from Gaza': Palestinians hail ceasefire deal
-
Ukrainian takes sumo by storm after fleeing war to pursue dreams
-
French cinema booms in Russia despite political rift
-
Nobel literature buzz tips Western male author
-
OMG! German influencers face tax dodging crackdown
-
Merz to host German auto sector crisis meeting
-
Afghan Taliban foreign minister begins first India visit
-
French court to rule in Gisele Pelicot rape appeal trial
-
Kimmel hopes boycott outrage drew free speech 'red line'
RYCEF | 0.84% | 15.53 | $ | |
BCE | 0.26% | 23.29 | $ | |
SCS | -0.93% | 16.635 | $ | |
BCC | -3.19% | 74.06 | $ | |
NGG | 0.37% | 73.88 | $ | |
CMSD | 0.06% | 24.345 | $ | |
RBGPF | -1.86% | 75.73 | $ | |
CMSC | 0% | 23.71 | $ | |
JRI | -0.64% | 14.03 | $ | |
RELX | -1.46% | 45.18 | $ | |
VOD | 0.22% | 11.295 | $ | |
RIO | 0.25% | 67.87 | $ | |
BTI | -1.08% | 51.05 | $ | |
AZN | 0.83% | 86.095 | $ | |
GSK | 1.66% | 44.08 | $ | |
BP | 0.09% | 34.55 | $ |

Ferrari goes electric with four-seat coupe 'Elettrica'
Ferrari's first electric sports car, to be released next year, will be a four-seat coupe with over 1,000 horsepower and a range of 530 kilometres (329 miles), the company announced Thursday.
Named "Elettrica", the new Ferrari is primarily targeted at wealthy customers "who want to drive only electric cars and want to live the Ferrari experience," Ferrari CEO Benedetto Vigna said during a presentation to investors and the media at the company's factory in Maranello.
But Ferrari has no intention of going all-electric with its portfolio anytime soon.
"It's an addition (to the lineup), not a transition," Vigna said.
The company did not disclose a selling price for the car, but analysts say Ferrari will need to carefully position it in relation to the nearly 500,000 euros ($580,500) base price of its Purosangue SUV.
Ferrari already sells nearly half of its cars in hybrid versions, but until now has not made the shift to electric, coming several years after Porsche, Lamborghini, Lotus, and the very fast Rimac.
Ferrari's management unveiled the car's architecture on Wednesday evening, with a very low driving position in a recycled aluminium chassis with a large motor on each of the four wheels.
As expected from Ferrari, the Elettrica promises to be fast, going from zero to 100 kilometres per hour in 2.5 seconds with a maximum speed of 310 km/h, but the choice of a four-seater model puts it behind some of its competitors.
The classic Ferrari shift paddles on the steering wheel will be used on the Elettrica to opt between a smooth or sporty driving style, modulating the power of the motors and the suspension control.
In an homage to large gasoline engines, the Elettrica offers a simulated downshift, while the purr of the traditional engines will be replaced with an amplified sound from the electric motor.
That will "give information" to the driver about the feel of the road, explained Gianmaria Fulgenzi, product director at Ferrari.
"It's like choosing between a sailboat and a motorboat: both are exciting but in different ways," he said.
The brand has taken on the costly development of most of the technical innovations internally, particularly the integrated battery pack, "because keeping that expert knowledge in-house means we can stay competitive", he said.
The final model is due to be unveiled in early 2026.
On Thursday morning, Ferrari is set to give hundreds of investors and financial analysts invited to Maranello details of its strategy for the coming years.
The aim is to protect its significant profit margins (which in the first half of 2025 were 23.4 percent) in the rapidly changing automotive and luxury sectors.
F.Wagner--VB