This luxury car can use ‘leap mode' for potholes – but it's not a Ferrari
You wouldn't suspect it from the crowds that vied for snaps with Porsche's line-up of new and classic models at Shanghai's auto show, but the German luxury carmaker has fallen on tough times in China.
Chinese buyers have dimmed on the brand, whose sales plunged 42 per cent in the first quarter this year, accelerating a precipitous slide throughout 2024, as the country's economic downturn bites into the wallets of the luxury-loving classes.
But the real culprit is the relentless march of China's electric vehicle industry, which, having conquered domestic demand for cheap, accessible cars, is making inroads into the high-end market where European brands once seemed unassailable.
As hundreds of thousands of people traversed the sprawling, multi-level display floors showcasing more than 70 Chinese and international automotive brands at the fortnight-long Shanghai expo, there was plenty of anecdotal evidence of the challenges facing the legacy manufacturers.
When it comes to price, technological prowess and even aesthetics, buyers are increasingly turning to homegrown Chinese brands.
Next door to Porsche on the showroom floor was the Huawei-backed AITO brand, one of the Chinese companies eating the lunch of the foreign automakers.
'We would have considered a Porsche if we continued with an internal combustion engine, but it doesn't actually make much sense. We want to experience more high-tech things,' said Song Junqun, 41, a worker in the semiconductor industry.
Song and his wife, Yu Qiong, were eyeing off the AITO's M9 luxury SUV, which pulled a sizeable crowd as people clambered into the leather-clad interior to test the software embedded in multiple screens.
Huawei is viewed with suspicion in the West, particularly in Australia, where it was banned from the 5G network rollout. But in China, where it is the leading smartphone company, its pivot into the auto sector is paying off as customers seek out its cutting-edge smart driving systems.
The M9 is billed as a direct rival to the Mercedes-Benz GLS, the car Song's family currently drives. But at about 500,000 yuan ($107,000), it's about half the cost. They considered Mercedes' latest EV models, and quickly passed them over.
'We made many comparisons and found that Chinese cars definitely perform better in the field of intelligent driving,' Song said.
Amid the bright lights and cacophony of the Shanghai expo, one of the largest international car shows, it's almost unfathomable to think that 40 years ago, China didn't have a car manufacturing industry.
Today, China is the world's biggest carmaker and exporter. Its booming EV industry is oversaturated with brands and models, sparking warnings from experts of a reckoning on the horizon.
BYD, which made its first fully electric car in 2009, is now China's best-selling car brand. In 2024, it overtook Tesla as the world's top EV seller. It had sales of more than 4.27 million fully electric and hybrid vehicles, more than double its rival.
Aside from BYD dominance, more than 130 Chinese EV brands are competing for the nation's buyers. The auto expo, which alternates between Shanghai and Beijing, has become a glitzy testament to the cut-price showdown in the overcrowded sector.
Bolstered by generous Chinese state subsidies, most of the EV brands are loss-making ventures. BYD, Li Auto and the Seres Group (which produces the AITO brand) are among the few turning a profit.
But the furious competition is driving an innovation race that spans the incredible to the absurd.
At the BYD showroom, sales reps demonstrated its five-minute fast-charging technology. Another brand deployed a violin player to set the tune as its top model SUV 'danced' on its suspension.
Other brands boasted rotating seats that allow back-seat passengers to face each other and play cards or, as one ill-advised promotional video shows, eat hotpot on the road. Another spruiked its 'pet-mode' customisation features.
Under its luxury spin-off brand, Yangwang, BYD showcased its ultra-sleek U9 electric super-coupe – in red, of course. Alongside wing-like doors and acceleration that takes it from zero to 100km/h in under two seconds, it also has a 'leap mode' designed to jump potholes and, for unexplained reasons, road spikes.
It's China's most expensive vehicle, priced at 1.68 million yuan ($360,000), pitched at the country's elite with a penchant for Ferraris or Lamborghinis. Just 160 have been sold so far in China, and while it is not widely available overseas, the vice president of the United Arab Emirates has purchased two, or so a sales rep told curious onlookers.
While China's impressive technological strides in electrification should be applauded, the glut of brands heralds a warning for Australia, says Australian Automotive Dealer Association chief executive James Voortman.
'The Chinese brands are moving at a pace we've never seen before in this industry. But it is also a little bit disconcerting because it does have a feel that there are too many of them. There's a bit of a bubble,' Voortman, who visited the expo last month, says.
AADA data shows there are about 60 car brands in Australia, more than a dozen of them Chinese. At least six further Chinese brands are expected to enter the market in the near future.
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'In Australia, we are reaching a dangerous level of oversupply. We have more makes and models than most developed countries,' Voortman says. 'It's a very perilous time.'
While competition, most notably between BYD and Tesla, is driving down prices, the risk is that consumers and dealers are left high and dry when either legacy brands or new entrants quit the market, he says.
Global consulting firm AlixPartners predicts that just 19 Chinese EV brands will be profitable by 2030. Among those warning of a consolidation is He Xiaopeng, chief executive of EV maker XPeng, who recently told his colleagues the next two years 'marks the elimination round in the automotive industry'.
Australians still have a love affair with Japanese, Korean and US cars, which dominate new car sales. Toyota has been the country's top-selling brand for two decades. But even as EV sales in Australia have flattened recently, appetite for plug-in hybrids has soared. Last month, BYD's Shark 6 plug-in ute cracked the top 10 best-selling vehicles, in sixth spot.
'Your EV dollar in Australia these days is much more contested,' says Electric Vehicle Council head of legal, policy and advocacy Aman Gaur. The cheapest EV in Australia is BYD's Dolphin, priced under $30,000.
Unlike Europe and America, which have imposed heavy tariffs on imported Chinese vehicles, Australia no longer has a local car manufacturing industry to defend.
With no tariffs hobbling their entry, the Australian market, though comparatively small compared to its Asian neighbours, is seen by Chinese carmakers as a valuable testing ground for their competitiveness.
'If a Chinese car company can make a sound development in Australia, it can promote this model to other markets,' says Shanghai-based automotive analyst Zhang Xiang.
Savvy Chinese buyers are also aware of the risks of betting on newer EV brands.
Arriving at the show early to beat the midday rush, Mr Li, 35, a Peugeot driver for most of the past decade, made a beeline for BYD, passing the European carmakers and the less-established Chinese brands.
'The technology in Chinese cars, especially EVs, is more advanced than foreign cars,' he said.
'But new car-making brands are unstable and may go bankrupt one day. This is what I'm concerned about.'
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The Advertiser
3 hours ago
- The Advertiser
US economic growth to slow to 1.6 per cent, OECD says
US economic growth will slow to 1.6 per cent this year from 2.8 per cent last year as President Donald Trump's erratic trade wars disrupt global commerce, leaving businesses and consumers paralysed by uncertainty, the OECD says. The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development forecast the US economy - the world's largest - will slow further to just 1.5 per cent in 2026. Trump's policies have raised average US tariff rates from around 2.5 per cent to 15.4 per cent, the highest since 1938, according to the OECD. World economic growth will slow to just 2.9 per cent this year and stay there in 2026, according to the forecast. It marks a substantial deceleration from growth of 3.3 per cent global growth last year and 3.4 per cent in 2023. The world economy has proven remarkably resilient in recent years, continuing to expand steadily in the face of global shocks such as the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia's invasion of Ukraine. But global trade and the economic outlook have been clouded by Trump's sweeping taxes on imports, the unpredictable way he's rolled them out and the threat of retaliation from other countries. Reversing decades of US policy in favour of freer world trade, Trump has levied 10 per cent tariffs on imports from almost every country. He's also threatened more import taxes, including a doubling of his tariffs on steel and aluminium to 50 per cent. Without mentioning Trump by name, OECD chief economist Álvaro Pereira wrote in a commentary to accompany the forecast that "we have seen a significant increase in trade barriers as well as in economic and trade policy uncertainty. This sharp rise in uncertainty has negatively impacted business and consumer confidence and is set to hold back trade and investment." China - the world's second-biggest economy - is forecast to see growth decelerate from five per cent last year to 4.7 per cent in 2025 and 4.3 per cent in 2026. Chinese exporters will be hurt by Trump's tariffs, hobbling an economy already weakened by the collapse of the nation's real estate market. Some of the damage will be offset by help from the government: Beijing last month outlined plans to cut interest rates and encourage bank lending as well as allocating more money for factory upgrades and elder care, among other things. The 20 countries that share the euro currency will collectively see economic growth pick up from 0.8 per cent last year to one per cent in 2025 and 1.2 per cent next year, the OECD said, helped by interest rate cuts from the European Central Bank. The Paris-based OECD, comprising 38 member countries, works to promote international trade and prosperity and issues periodic reports and analyses. US economic growth will slow to 1.6 per cent this year from 2.8 per cent last year as President Donald Trump's erratic trade wars disrupt global commerce, leaving businesses and consumers paralysed by uncertainty, the OECD says. The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development forecast the US economy - the world's largest - will slow further to just 1.5 per cent in 2026. Trump's policies have raised average US tariff rates from around 2.5 per cent to 15.4 per cent, the highest since 1938, according to the OECD. World economic growth will slow to just 2.9 per cent this year and stay there in 2026, according to the forecast. It marks a substantial deceleration from growth of 3.3 per cent global growth last year and 3.4 per cent in 2023. The world economy has proven remarkably resilient in recent years, continuing to expand steadily in the face of global shocks such as the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia's invasion of Ukraine. But global trade and the economic outlook have been clouded by Trump's sweeping taxes on imports, the unpredictable way he's rolled them out and the threat of retaliation from other countries. Reversing decades of US policy in favour of freer world trade, Trump has levied 10 per cent tariffs on imports from almost every country. He's also threatened more import taxes, including a doubling of his tariffs on steel and aluminium to 50 per cent. Without mentioning Trump by name, OECD chief economist Álvaro Pereira wrote in a commentary to accompany the forecast that "we have seen a significant increase in trade barriers as well as in economic and trade policy uncertainty. This sharp rise in uncertainty has negatively impacted business and consumer confidence and is set to hold back trade and investment." China - the world's second-biggest economy - is forecast to see growth decelerate from five per cent last year to 4.7 per cent in 2025 and 4.3 per cent in 2026. Chinese exporters will be hurt by Trump's tariffs, hobbling an economy already weakened by the collapse of the nation's real estate market. Some of the damage will be offset by help from the government: Beijing last month outlined plans to cut interest rates and encourage bank lending as well as allocating more money for factory upgrades and elder care, among other things. The 20 countries that share the euro currency will collectively see economic growth pick up from 0.8 per cent last year to one per cent in 2025 and 1.2 per cent next year, the OECD said, helped by interest rate cuts from the European Central Bank. The Paris-based OECD, comprising 38 member countries, works to promote international trade and prosperity and issues periodic reports and analyses. US economic growth will slow to 1.6 per cent this year from 2.8 per cent last year as President Donald Trump's erratic trade wars disrupt global commerce, leaving businesses and consumers paralysed by uncertainty, the OECD says. The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development forecast the US economy - the world's largest - will slow further to just 1.5 per cent in 2026. Trump's policies have raised average US tariff rates from around 2.5 per cent to 15.4 per cent, the highest since 1938, according to the OECD. World economic growth will slow to just 2.9 per cent this year and stay there in 2026, according to the forecast. It marks a substantial deceleration from growth of 3.3 per cent global growth last year and 3.4 per cent in 2023. The world economy has proven remarkably resilient in recent years, continuing to expand steadily in the face of global shocks such as the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia's invasion of Ukraine. But global trade and the economic outlook have been clouded by Trump's sweeping taxes on imports, the unpredictable way he's rolled them out and the threat of retaliation from other countries. Reversing decades of US policy in favour of freer world trade, Trump has levied 10 per cent tariffs on imports from almost every country. He's also threatened more import taxes, including a doubling of his tariffs on steel and aluminium to 50 per cent. Without mentioning Trump by name, OECD chief economist Álvaro Pereira wrote in a commentary to accompany the forecast that "we have seen a significant increase in trade barriers as well as in economic and trade policy uncertainty. This sharp rise in uncertainty has negatively impacted business and consumer confidence and is set to hold back trade and investment." China - the world's second-biggest economy - is forecast to see growth decelerate from five per cent last year to 4.7 per cent in 2025 and 4.3 per cent in 2026. Chinese exporters will be hurt by Trump's tariffs, hobbling an economy already weakened by the collapse of the nation's real estate market. Some of the damage will be offset by help from the government: Beijing last month outlined plans to cut interest rates and encourage bank lending as well as allocating more money for factory upgrades and elder care, among other things. The 20 countries that share the euro currency will collectively see economic growth pick up from 0.8 per cent last year to one per cent in 2025 and 1.2 per cent next year, the OECD said, helped by interest rate cuts from the European Central Bank. The Paris-based OECD, comprising 38 member countries, works to promote international trade and prosperity and issues periodic reports and analyses. US economic growth will slow to 1.6 per cent this year from 2.8 per cent last year as President Donald Trump's erratic trade wars disrupt global commerce, leaving businesses and consumers paralysed by uncertainty, the OECD says. The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development forecast the US economy - the world's largest - will slow further to just 1.5 per cent in 2026. Trump's policies have raised average US tariff rates from around 2.5 per cent to 15.4 per cent, the highest since 1938, according to the OECD. World economic growth will slow to just 2.9 per cent this year and stay there in 2026, according to the forecast. It marks a substantial deceleration from growth of 3.3 per cent global growth last year and 3.4 per cent in 2023. The world economy has proven remarkably resilient in recent years, continuing to expand steadily in the face of global shocks such as the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia's invasion of Ukraine. But global trade and the economic outlook have been clouded by Trump's sweeping taxes on imports, the unpredictable way he's rolled them out and the threat of retaliation from other countries. Reversing decades of US policy in favour of freer world trade, Trump has levied 10 per cent tariffs on imports from almost every country. He's also threatened more import taxes, including a doubling of his tariffs on steel and aluminium to 50 per cent. Without mentioning Trump by name, OECD chief economist Álvaro Pereira wrote in a commentary to accompany the forecast that "we have seen a significant increase in trade barriers as well as in economic and trade policy uncertainty. This sharp rise in uncertainty has negatively impacted business and consumer confidence and is set to hold back trade and investment." China - the world's second-biggest economy - is forecast to see growth decelerate from five per cent last year to 4.7 per cent in 2025 and 4.3 per cent in 2026. Chinese exporters will be hurt by Trump's tariffs, hobbling an economy already weakened by the collapse of the nation's real estate market. Some of the damage will be offset by help from the government: Beijing last month outlined plans to cut interest rates and encourage bank lending as well as allocating more money for factory upgrades and elder care, among other things. The 20 countries that share the euro currency will collectively see economic growth pick up from 0.8 per cent last year to one per cent in 2025 and 1.2 per cent next year, the OECD said, helped by interest rate cuts from the European Central Bank. The Paris-based OECD, comprising 38 member countries, works to promote international trade and prosperity and issues periodic reports and analyses.


The Advertiser
3 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Polish PM says confidence vote will held on June 11
Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk says parliament will hold a confidence vote on his government on June 11. He called for the vote after his political ally, the liberal Warsaw mayor, lost Poland's presidential election to conservative Karol Nawrocki. "We are starting the session in a new political reality," Tusk said, at the start of a cabinet meeting in Warsaw. "The political reality is new, because we have a new president. But the constitution, our obligations and the expectations of citizens have not changed. In Poland, the government rules, which is a great obligation and honour." Tusk's government runs most of the day-to-day matters in Poland. It also exists separately from the presidency, but the president holds power to veto laws and influence foreign policy, and Nawrocki's win will make it extremely difficult for Tusk to press his pro-EU agenda. There are already questions about whether Tusk's fragile coalition can survive until the next scheduled parliamentary election at the end of 2027. The decision to call a confidence vote is apparently an attempt by Tusk to try to reassert authority in a shifting political situation where some of his coalition partners might be less likely to want to stick with him. Tusk oversees a coalition of several parties spanning an ideological divide, from left-wing progressives to centrists to agrarian conservatives. The divided coalition has failed to agree on some issues and the government has failed to fulfil some of Tusk's key promises, including a liberalisation of the restrictive abortion law. Nawrocki, who was supported by US President Donald Trump, won 50.89 per cent of votes in a tight race against Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski, who received 49.11 per cent. The election revealed deep divisions in the nation along the eastern flank of NATO and the European Union. Nawrocki, who is set to take office on August 6, is expected to shape Poland's domestic and foreign policy in ways that could strain ties with Brussels while aligning the central European nation of nearly 38 million people more closely with the Trump administration. Trump welcomed his election, saying on his social media platform Truth Social: "Congratulations Poland, you picked a WINNER!" Nawrocki replied to Trump on X, saying: "Thank you, Mr President. Strong alliance with the USA, as well as partnership based on close co-operation are my top priorities." AP Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk says parliament will hold a confidence vote on his government on June 11. He called for the vote after his political ally, the liberal Warsaw mayor, lost Poland's presidential election to conservative Karol Nawrocki. "We are starting the session in a new political reality," Tusk said, at the start of a cabinet meeting in Warsaw. "The political reality is new, because we have a new president. But the constitution, our obligations and the expectations of citizens have not changed. In Poland, the government rules, which is a great obligation and honour." Tusk's government runs most of the day-to-day matters in Poland. It also exists separately from the presidency, but the president holds power to veto laws and influence foreign policy, and Nawrocki's win will make it extremely difficult for Tusk to press his pro-EU agenda. There are already questions about whether Tusk's fragile coalition can survive until the next scheduled parliamentary election at the end of 2027. The decision to call a confidence vote is apparently an attempt by Tusk to try to reassert authority in a shifting political situation where some of his coalition partners might be less likely to want to stick with him. Tusk oversees a coalition of several parties spanning an ideological divide, from left-wing progressives to centrists to agrarian conservatives. The divided coalition has failed to agree on some issues and the government has failed to fulfil some of Tusk's key promises, including a liberalisation of the restrictive abortion law. Nawrocki, who was supported by US President Donald Trump, won 50.89 per cent of votes in a tight race against Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski, who received 49.11 per cent. The election revealed deep divisions in the nation along the eastern flank of NATO and the European Union. Nawrocki, who is set to take office on August 6, is expected to shape Poland's domestic and foreign policy in ways that could strain ties with Brussels while aligning the central European nation of nearly 38 million people more closely with the Trump administration. Trump welcomed his election, saying on his social media platform Truth Social: "Congratulations Poland, you picked a WINNER!" Nawrocki replied to Trump on X, saying: "Thank you, Mr President. Strong alliance with the USA, as well as partnership based on close co-operation are my top priorities." AP Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk says parliament will hold a confidence vote on his government on June 11. He called for the vote after his political ally, the liberal Warsaw mayor, lost Poland's presidential election to conservative Karol Nawrocki. "We are starting the session in a new political reality," Tusk said, at the start of a cabinet meeting in Warsaw. "The political reality is new, because we have a new president. But the constitution, our obligations and the expectations of citizens have not changed. In Poland, the government rules, which is a great obligation and honour." Tusk's government runs most of the day-to-day matters in Poland. It also exists separately from the presidency, but the president holds power to veto laws and influence foreign policy, and Nawrocki's win will make it extremely difficult for Tusk to press his pro-EU agenda. There are already questions about whether Tusk's fragile coalition can survive until the next scheduled parliamentary election at the end of 2027. The decision to call a confidence vote is apparently an attempt by Tusk to try to reassert authority in a shifting political situation where some of his coalition partners might be less likely to want to stick with him. Tusk oversees a coalition of several parties spanning an ideological divide, from left-wing progressives to centrists to agrarian conservatives. The divided coalition has failed to agree on some issues and the government has failed to fulfil some of Tusk's key promises, including a liberalisation of the restrictive abortion law. Nawrocki, who was supported by US President Donald Trump, won 50.89 per cent of votes in a tight race against Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski, who received 49.11 per cent. The election revealed deep divisions in the nation along the eastern flank of NATO and the European Union. Nawrocki, who is set to take office on August 6, is expected to shape Poland's domestic and foreign policy in ways that could strain ties with Brussels while aligning the central European nation of nearly 38 million people more closely with the Trump administration. Trump welcomed his election, saying on his social media platform Truth Social: "Congratulations Poland, you picked a WINNER!" Nawrocki replied to Trump on X, saying: "Thank you, Mr President. Strong alliance with the USA, as well as partnership based on close co-operation are my top priorities." AP Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk says parliament will hold a confidence vote on his government on June 11. He called for the vote after his political ally, the liberal Warsaw mayor, lost Poland's presidential election to conservative Karol Nawrocki. "We are starting the session in a new political reality," Tusk said, at the start of a cabinet meeting in Warsaw. "The political reality is new, because we have a new president. But the constitution, our obligations and the expectations of citizens have not changed. In Poland, the government rules, which is a great obligation and honour." Tusk's government runs most of the day-to-day matters in Poland. It also exists separately from the presidency, but the president holds power to veto laws and influence foreign policy, and Nawrocki's win will make it extremely difficult for Tusk to press his pro-EU agenda. There are already questions about whether Tusk's fragile coalition can survive until the next scheduled parliamentary election at the end of 2027. The decision to call a confidence vote is apparently an attempt by Tusk to try to reassert authority in a shifting political situation where some of his coalition partners might be less likely to want to stick with him. Tusk oversees a coalition of several parties spanning an ideological divide, from left-wing progressives to centrists to agrarian conservatives. The divided coalition has failed to agree on some issues and the government has failed to fulfil some of Tusk's key promises, including a liberalisation of the restrictive abortion law. Nawrocki, who was supported by US President Donald Trump, won 50.89 per cent of votes in a tight race against Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski, who received 49.11 per cent. The election revealed deep divisions in the nation along the eastern flank of NATO and the European Union. Nawrocki, who is set to take office on August 6, is expected to shape Poland's domestic and foreign policy in ways that could strain ties with Brussels while aligning the central European nation of nearly 38 million people more closely with the Trump administration. Trump welcomed his election, saying on his social media platform Truth Social: "Congratulations Poland, you picked a WINNER!" Nawrocki replied to Trump on X, saying: "Thank you, Mr President. Strong alliance with the USA, as well as partnership based on close co-operation are my top priorities." AP


West Australian
3 hours ago
- West Australian
Ferrari heavyweight replaces Scott Barlow as Sydney FC chairman
Scott Barlow's 13-year tenure as Sydney FC chairman has come to an end as part of an 'evolution' aimed at increasing the A-League club's 'international profile'. Ferrari Australasia president Dr Jan Voss, who joined the Sky Blues board last season, will replace Barlow as chairman. Voss is fluent in five languages – English, German, Italian, French, and Dutch – and 'brings a global perspective and deep experience in brand, performance, and strategic growth' As part of a 'broader strategic restructure', inaugural club chairman Walter Bugno returns to Sydney's board, while technology entrepreneur Sebastian Gray has also been added to the board. 'This is a pivotal moment for Sydney FC,' Voss said. 'I am honoured to be appointed chairman and to work alongside a board that is deeply passionate about football and our club's future.' The club's ownership structure hasn't changed, with the Barlow family remaining as 98 per cent investors, with the other two per cent owned by the Crismale family and two other Australian shareholders. 'With a strong and stable ownership base and a renewed focus on innovation, commercial growth, and elite performance, Sydney FC is more ready than ever to embrace the challenges of the modern football landscape,' Voss said. Barlow has not only departed as chairman but also as board member after two decades of service. 'I wish to thank Scott for his extraordinary leadership and commitment,' Voss said. 'His 13 years as chairman have laid the foundations for the club's next era of growth and international ambition.' Gray – who co-founded Dugout, a digital media company co-owned by a host of top European clubs, including Real Madrid, Barcelona, Bayern Munich, PSG, Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Juventus, and Manchester City – will strengthen Sydney's focus on 'innovation, digital engagement, and sustainable investment'. Sydney's board also includes technical director Han Berger, Michael Crismale, Suzie Shaw, and Peter Paradise. The Ufuk Talay-coached Sky Blues failed to reach this season's A-League finals series, finishing seventh on the ladder. They reached the semi-finals of the AFC Champions League Two competition before being knocked out by Singapore club Lion City Sailors.