From Sales Crash to Boardroom Reset: Why Porsche’s Slump Forced a Leadership Change
CEO Today investigates what went wrong at Porsche, who absorbed the damage — and why the board ultimately concluded that a leadership reset was unavoidable.
For the first time since the aftermath of the global financial crisis, Porsche has recorded a double-digit fall in global deliveries. Sales declined by around 10% in 2025the brand’s sharpest annual drop since 2009, ending a long stretch in which Porsche appeared largely insulated from the pressures reshaping the global automotive industry.
The headline number matters less than what it reveals beneath the surface: a strategy calibrated for a different economic cycle, delayed responses to clear market signals, and a widening gap between what Porsche expected to sell and what customers were ultimately willing to buy.
Those pressures did not emerge overnight. But as they accumulated, the board reached a conclusion that has now been formalized — ending a decade-long leadership chapter and setting the stage for a strategic reset at the top.
Where the Slide Started — And Why It Spread So Quickly
The sharpest damage came from China, once Porsche’s most important growth engine. Deliveries there fell by more than 25% year-on-yearextending a multi-year decline that has reduced volumes to roughly half of their 2021 peak. During Porsche’s expansion years, China accounted for close to one-third of global growth. That engine has now stalled.
The shift was driven by structural change rather than a temporary slowdown. Economic momentum weakened, high-end consumer confidence softened, and domestic Chinese EV brands rapidly closed the technology gap while offering competitive alternatives at lower price points. Porsche’s long-standing refusal to discount — historically a source of brand strength — became a constraint in a market that pivoted from aspiration to value with unexpected speed.
Elsewhere, pressure mounted for different reasons. In Europe, new EU cybersecurity regulations forced Porsche to pause or withdraw several combustion models, leaving material gaps in its line-up. In the United States, the absence of local manufacturing left the company exposed to tariffs and cost inflation, squeezing margins and limiting pricing flexibility. None of these challenges would normally derail Porsche in isolation. Combined, they produced a meaningful volume shock.
The EV Strategy That Collided With Market Reality
Porsche’s electric pivot was neither cautious nor accidental. The Taycan demonstrated that electric performance could still feel engineered, premium and unmistakably Porsche. The problem was not credible — it was timing.
Electric vehicles now account for roughly 20-22% of global deliveriesplacing Porsche near the upper end of its internal targets. Yet that share remains insufficient to offset falling combustion volumes or absorb the scale of capital committed to batteries, software platforms and delayed launches. Costs were front-loaded. Demand arrived more slowly.
The issue was not technological failure but commercial friction. Performance EVs deliver extraordinary acceleration and safety, but many traditional Porsche buyers remain emotionally unconvinced. Quiet speed and digital refinement struggle to replace the mechanical theater that defined the brand for decades. In a segment driven by desire rather than logic, that hesitation has tangible financial consequences.
Why the Board Ultimately Moved On From Oliver Blume
As both Porsche CEO and Volkswagen Group chief executive, Oliver Blume led the company through record financial years, a landmark IPO and an aggressive expansion strategy. But the scale and pace of change confronting Porsche ultimately exposed the limits of a dual-leadership structure.
The criticism is not that Blume caused Porsche’s downturn. Few executives could have insulated a premium performance brand from China’s slowdown, higher interest rates or the broader reassessment of EV demand. The issue, increasingly recognized by investors and insiders, is that Porsche did not adjust quickly enough once those pressures became unmistakable.
China exposure remained outsized as demand deteriorated. The EV rollout was not recalibrated early enough as consumer appetite softened. Regulatory disruption in Europe created product gaps that were managed reactively rather than pre-emptively. Decisions were made — but later than the market required.
The supervisory board’s decision to separate Porsche’s leadership from Volkswagen Group and appoint a successor was therefore not a repudiation of Blume’s tenure, but a corrective governance move. What worked during years of expansion became a constraint during contraction. The board has effectively conceded that Porsche’s reset now requires undivided executive focus.
What Michael Leiter’s Inherits — And Why the Reset Starts Now
That responsibility now passes to Michael Leiterswho assumed the role of Porsche CEO on 1 January 2026. Leiters arrives with deep performance-car credentials, having served as Ferrari’s long-time chief technology officer and more recently as CEO of McLaren Automotive. He also brings institutional memory, having previously spent more than a decade at Porsche, including leadership roles on the Macan and Cayenne programs.
Leaders is not inheriting a crisis, but he is inheriting a narrower margin for error. EV strategy must be recalibrated without alienating core buyers. China must be stabilized without compromising brand discipline. Margins must be defended as volume growth becomes harder to sustain.
The board’s decision signals a shift from expansion to execution. Porsche’s worst sales fall since 2009 has not undermined the brand — but it has forced realism back into strategy. Whether the downturn proves temporary or marks a longer adjustment will depend less on technology than on governance, discipline and the speed with which leadership turns correction into clarity.
Porsche’s stumble matters because it exposes how even the strongest premium brands are struggling to convert EV ambition into profitable demand — a problem now facing the entire luxury car sector. The deeper lesson is that technology transitions punish hesitation more than mistakes — and Porsche’s board has acted to ensure the next phase is led with speed, not balance.










