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Corvette to Remain A Chevy Product

GM President Mark Reuss Confirms that America's Sports Car Will Continue To Wear a "Bowtie" For the Forseeable Future

General Motors President Mark Reuss drives the 2020 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray onto the stage during its unveiling Thursday, July 18, 2019 in Tustin, California. The 2020 Stingray, the brand’s first-ever production mid-engine Corvette, features a new 6.2L Small Block V-8 LT2 engine producing 495 horsepower and 470 lb-ft of torque when equipped with performance exhaust. The 2020 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray goes into production in late 2019 and will start under $60,000. (Photo by Dan MacMedan for Chevrolet)
General Motors President Mark Reuss drives the 2020 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray onto the stage during its unveiling Thursday, July 18, 2019 in Tustin, California. The 2020 Stingray, the brand’s first-ever production mid-engine Corvette, features a new 6.2L Small Block V-8 LT2 engine producing 495 horsepower and 470 lb-ft of torque when equipped with performance exhaust. The 2020 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray goes into production in late 2019 and will start under $60,000. (Photo by Dan MacMedan for Chevrolet)

For the past several years, automotive enthusiasts have been debating the future of the branding behind Chevrolet’s flagship sports car.  The rumor mills have certainly been busy, promoting the notion that the Corvette will spin off from Chevrolet and become its own, unique brand and that such a brand might include such variants as electric sedans, an SUV, and even a fully electric successor to the mid-engine C8 Stingray.

However, if you listen to the statements being presented by GM President Mark Reuss, these rumors are just that – RUMORS.

Reuss, who recently appeared on the “Jay Leno’s Garage” YouTube Channel, stated that the Corvette moniker will continue to be part of the Chevrolet brand of automobiles for the foreseeable future.

“We’d never take [Corvette] out of Chevrolet because the core of Chevrolet is offering people more than they thought for the money and doing it with fantastic design and performance,” Reuss told Leno as the pair admired Chevrolet’s latest entrant into the Corvette lineup – the 2025 C8 Corvette ZR1. “That’s what Corvette is.”

This should come as a relief to those purists who have questioned the uncertainty of Corvette’s future.  It is certainly understandable how such a rumor might take root.  The Chevy Corvette has always represented enormous performance and power while remaining one of the best values in premium sports cars since its introduction in 1953.  While later generations have catapulted the Corvette from a capable weekend cruiser to a genuine competitor on the world supercar stage, the Corvette’s latest iteration – the C8 (which includes the ERay, as well as the latest Z06 and ZR1 models) – has proved to be nothing short of spectacular in terms of speed, handling, and drivability.  What makes these cars even more remarkable is their low price point compared to similarly equipped competitors from Porsche, Ferrari, Mercedes-Benz, etc.

But what adds the greatest credence to the rumor of a Corvette branding “spinoff” is the uncertain future of sports cars in the global automotive market.  While the Corvette continues to sell well, many of its competitors, including the Dodge Viper, the Jaguar F-Type, the Audi R8, and the Nissan GT-R, have all been discontinued over the past several years, with many of these departing the automotive marketplace within the last 12 months.  Such intense market uncertainty might leave manufacturers looking for creative ways to protect and preserve their most beloved branding…and, as such, makes the idea of a Corvette brand that markets to a broader audience not only plausible but possibly even desirable, especially if the alternative would be the loss of the marquee entirely.

However, assuming Reuss is to be believed (and yes, we believe him!) Chevrolet will stay the course and keep the Corvette right what it has always been…namely, a CHEVY Corvette!

Tadge Juechter, Corvette Chief Engineer.
Tadge Juechter, Retired Corvette Chief Engineer. (Image courtesy of GM Media.)

Reuss’ comments about the Corvette’s future aren’t the only ones coming out of Chevrolet’s camp making this claim.  In an interview with CNBC from earlier this year, retired Corvette Chief Engineer Tadge Juechter made similar proclamations about the Corvette.  Says Juechter, “Corvette’s at the heart of Chevrolet.  It’s a pure business play. If you’ve got this brand equity, you can just keep it at home, or you can choose to try to monetize it and put it outside.” He added that GM typically hasn’t endorsed the latter strategy.  Instead “[GM embraces] our important franchises, and [Corvette] is a really important franchise.”

So take a deep breath and relax.  It would seem, for the next few years at the very least, that the Corvette is going to continue as “America’s Sports Car.”  And that suits us just fine.  However, money has a way of altering/influencing even the most steadfast decisions.  Back in 2019, Morgan Stanley analyzed the potential cash value of a standalone Corvette brand and concluded that such a brand could have a cash value ranging from $7 to $12 billion.  That same analysis estimated that the Corvette marquee, under its current Chevrolet branding, had a total valuation of around $2 billion.   While not an insignificant number by any means, this financial analysis suggests that a Corvette division of GM could be worth four to six times as much as the marquee is today.  That’s nearly impossible for any responsible business leader to ignore, especially in the face of the automotive market uncertainty surrounding the sports car market space.