The much-vaunted drive to an electric future has hit a pothole. The Ferrari Luce, a flagship model that was supposed to signal Italy’s electric ambitions, has instead become a monument to overreach. Reception has been tepid, sales forecasts slashed, and the message is clear: the electric vehicle (EV) hype cycle, particularly around Chinese manufacturers, is running out of juice.
Let’s look at the numbers. The Luce was meant to shift 100,000 units this year. Current run-rate suggests half that, at best. Worse, margins are being squeezed by battery costs that refuse to deflate. Investors are starting to ask the uncomfortable question: if Ferrari can’t make an EV profitable, who can?
This is where the Chinese narrative becomes interesting. For years, we have been told that Chinese EV makers would storm the global market. But the same inflation that has ravaged western supply chains has hit Chinese producers too. Their subsidies are not infinite, and the gigafactories themselves are not immune to raw material cost spikes. The Luce backlash may be just the beginning of a broader reassessment. Capital flight from the sector is already visible, with green energy ETFs down 15% year-to-date.
Enter the British battery firms. Far from being squeezed out, they see an opportunity. UK battery manufacturers, long the bridesmaids in the EV wedding, are now rushing to fill the gap left by faltering Chinese competition. The logic is simple: supply chains are shortening, and investors are demanding ‘friendlier’ sources. British firms, while smaller, have better access to lithium and nickel refining capacity within stable jurisdictions. Their pricing may be higher, but the premium for reliability is suddenly in vogue.
Consider Britishvolt’s latest capital raise. The company had been written off a year ago. Now it is tapping the market for another £200m, with a valuation that suggests real faith. The government, meanwhile, is finally using its fiscal headroom to offer tax credits for domestic battery production, a move that would have been dismissed as state interference in better times.
But let’s not get carried away. The market is still volatile. Gilt yields are rising again, and the cost of capital for any industrial venture is rising. These battery bets are not for the faint-hearted. They will require steady nerves and a cold eye on the bottom line. Yet for now, the shift is real. The Luce has not killed EVs; it has merely exposed the thin ice beneath the hype. British firms are smart to move while the market rebalances. They should also remember that yesterday’s hero is tomorrow’s cautionary tale.
The bottom line: the EV revolution is not cancelled, but it is being restructured. The British battery sector’s race to fill the gap is a classic City story of opportunism over optimism. Watch the capital flows, ignore the press releases.








