The luxury automotive landscape is currently undergoing a massive “reality check.” The industry is witnessing a split: while some brands are doubling down on electric power, others are performing a public U-turn to appease a market that isn’t moving as fast as the spreadsheets predicted.
Here is the breakdown of the shifts youโre seeing across the major players as of April 2026.
1. Porscheโs Course Correction
You’re spot on about Porsche. Oliver Blume (CEO of VW Group and formerly Porsche) recently admitted that the decision to make the new Macan an EV-only model was a miscalculation based on “data available at the time.”

- The Pivot: Porsche is now scrambling to reintroduce hybrid and combustion variants for models they previously intended to take fully electric.
- The Fallout: Global deliveries for Q1 2026 are down 15%, with Europe seeing an 18% drop. As a result, Porsche is pivoting back to a “flexible” powertrain strategy, ensuring the Cayenne and 911 lines keep their pistons pumping for much longer than originally planned.
2. BMWโs Q1 Strategy: The “Neue Klasse” Surge
BMW is actually the “outlier” in this trend. While Porsche and others are struggling, BMW reported that EV orders in Europe surged by 40% in Q1 2026 (announced mid-March).

- The Secret Sauce: BMW has successfully maintained a “power of choice” strategy, offering ICE, Hybrid, and EV versions of the same car.
- Neue Klasse Momentum: Interest in the upcoming iX3 (the first of the Neue Klasse generation) has exceeded expectations, with over 50,000 orders already logged. Unlike Porsche, BMWโs diversified approach seems to be shielding them from the “EV winter” hitting the US and China markets.
3. Rolls-Royce & the PEV Evolution
Rolls-Royce is moving in a different direction. With the Spectre now firmly established as their flagship EV, they aren’t looking back.
- The “Tomb-like” Silence: Their current focus isn’t just on power, but on a “PEV” (Performance Electric Vehicle) system that prioritizes near-total silence.

- The Shift: Unlike Porsche, Rolls-Royceโs clientele values the effortless, silent torque of electric motors over the roar of a V12. They are staying the course, though the Spectre Black Badge is now the primary focus for 2026, pushing 650 hp.
4. Collaborations with Iconic Designers
The industry is indeed turning toward “Design-Led” recovery. Several big manufacturers are bringing in outside creative heavyweights to differentiate their luxury EVs:
- Lotus x Haus of Automotive: At Milan Design Week this month (April 2026), Lotus is debuting a massive collaboration titled “IN PROGRESS,” created with Haus of Automotive and Konzepthaus. They are trying to move beyond being a “car company” and into a “design house.”
- BMW x Rimac: For the 2027 i7 updates, BMW has officially partnered with Mate Rimac (the designer/engineer behind the Nevera) to handle their next-gen battery tech, effectively “outsourcing” the soul of their performance EV to the industryโs most famous disruptor.
- Porscheโs “Return to Form”: Reports suggest Porsche is talking to classic design consultants to help “re-characterize” their EVs, making them look less like tech gadgets and more like the heritage sports cars fans are currently missing.
Industry Shift Summary: 2026
| Brand | Strategy Status | Sales Signal |
|---|---|---|
| Porsche | Defensive Pivot | Moving back to Hybrids/ICE to save volume. |
| BMW | Offensive Growth | High EV orders in Europe; Neue Klasse is a hit. |
| Rolls-Royce | Ultra-Luxury Lock-in | Sticking to pure EV for the “silent luxury” niche. |
| Lotus | Design-First | Collaborating with global creative hubs to survive. |



