Daily Auto Brief: Toyota Trims Output, Ford Hits Pause on a Ranger EV, Ferrari’s EV Firestorm, and a Manual Bids Adieu
Some days the car world hums along. Today it crackled. Production shocks from the world’s biggest automaker, truck pragmatism from Ford, a political dust-up over Ferrari’s next chapter, and a couple of 2027-model teasers to keep the future interesting. Also: one beloved manual shifter exits stage left, while a 750-hp Mustang with Hollywood provenance reenters the chat.
Toyota trims production as Middle East conflict ripples through the supply chain
Toyota is cutting output in response to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, a sober reminder that even the most bulletproof supply chains have soft spots. We’ve seen this movie since 2020—shipping lanes wobble, energy markets spike, suppliers hit pause, and suddenly your dealer’s “three-month wait” turns into “call me after summer.” Expect longer lead times on popular models and potential shuffling of build specs as Toyota prioritizes volume lines and high-demand trims.
If you’re shopping a RAV4 Hybrid, Corolla Cross Hybrid, or Hilux-type pickups in markets that get them, budget extra calendar time. Dealers will have the best local read, but the macro signal is clear: plan, don’t panic.
Trucks and SUVs: Ford takes the practical lane
Ranger EV on ice (for now)
Ford says a battery-electric Ranger isn’t happening yet because current tech doesn’t meet the use case. As someone who’s dragged a trailer up a long grade in the current Ranger, I get it. Range, charging access at worksites, and repeatable towing performance matter more than spec-sheet sizzle. Until pack energy density and fast-charging reliability take the next step—especially outside city cores—an electric mid-size ute has to fight physics and infrastructure.

About that “less powerful” new Ranger/Everest powertrain
Ford’s also defending a fresh powertrain that, on paper, looks softer. Don’t be fooled by the headline number. What matters is how it pulls in the first 30 feet and how smart the gearbox is. When I tried the current-generation Ranger on corrugated backroads, the calibration made the truck feel more muscular than its peak output suggested. If the new tune gives broader torque and lower revs at cruise, owners will see it at the pump and on long hauls. The Everest (the Ranger’s SUV twin in markets that get it) stands to benefit even more with quieter highway manners and easier urban drivability.

New model radar: 2027s lining up
Three nameplates popped onto the future sheet today—two plug-in hybrids and one full EV—each staking out a different corner of the market.
2027 Mercedes-Benz GLC350e Hybrid
Think of this as the commuter’s sweet spot in the GLC lineup: a plug-in hybrid for school runs and city cores with the long-haul comfort Mercedes does so well. Expect a turbocharged four-cylinder paired with an electric motor, enough EV-only range for errands, and a cabin that soaks up weekday life. In recent drives of rival PHEVs, I’ve found the trick is seamless handoffs between power sources and a brake pedal that doesn’t feel like you’re stepping on memory foam—areas where Mercedes typically scores well.
2027 GMC Sierra EV
GM’s Ultium-based full-size truck aims squarely at work-and-weekend duties. If past Sierra Denali appointments are any guide, this one will pile on creature comforts without forgetting tow/haul modes and bed utility. What I’ll be watching: charging curve consistency on road trips and how GMC tunes throttle response when the bed is loaded or a trailer’s on the ball.

2027 Porsche Cayenne Hybrid
Porsche treats hybrids like performance force multipliers, not eco side quests. Expect the 2027 Cayenne Hybrid to keep that vibe: electric torque for the first punch off the line, with a combustion engine doing the heavy lifting on a spirited Sunday. The last Cayenne hybrid I drove felt delightfully unbothered threading mountain switchbacks—lighter on its feet than the spec sheet implied—so I’m hoping for the same duality: weekday serenity, weekend mischief.
| Model | Powertrain | Segment | Buyer Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mercedes-Benz GLC350e | Plug-in hybrid | Premium compact SUV | Urban efficiency, quiet comfort, tech polish |
| GMC Sierra EV | Battery-electric | Full-size pickup | Work capability, road-trip charging, cabin space |
| Porsche Cayenne Hybrid | Plug-in hybrid | Performance midsize SUV | Speed with responsibility, handling, brand cachet |
Italy stirs: Ex-Ferrari boss and politicians slam the Ferrari Luce EV
Ferrari’s reported move toward an all-electric “Luce” has drawn fire from an ex-chief and a chorus of Italian politicians. It’s the classic red-car conundrum: can a silent prancing horse still prance? I’ve driven enough top-shelf EVs to know that character isn’t exclusively an exhaust note, but Ferrari’s magic is also ritual—rising idle on a cold start, the way a V8 clears its throat at 5,000 rpm. If Maranello wants loyalists on board, it’ll need to bottle some of that ritual in other ways: pedal feel, steering texture, and a soundtrack that enhances rather than imitates.

Enthusiast corner: one manual bows out, one legend stretches its legs
VW Jetta GLI drops the stick
The Jetta GLI becomes the latest sporty sedan to lose its manual gearbox. Rationally, the dual-clutch will be quicker and easier to sell. Emotionally, we all know what’s gone. I used to crawl across LA in a stick-shift and, yes, my left calf got the gym membership it never asked for—but the payoff on an empty on-ramp was priceless. If you want three pedals in a compact sport sedan, the menu keeps shrinking. Shop soon, choose wisely.
Paul Newman’s 750-hp Daytona Mustang heads back into the wild
After three decades parked in a museum, the Roush-tuned, roughly 750-hp Ford Mustang that Paul Newman raced at Daytona is being let go by Roush. That’s not just a spec line; it’s film and motorsport lore strapped to a roll cage. The car’s purpose is singular—go very fast for a very long time—and it wears that intent proudly. I’ve stood trackside at Daytona at night; machines like this don’t just make speed, they make time feel elastic. Whoever ends up with it will own a slice of American racing’s greatest hits album.
Feature highlights to watch
- Toyota production: anticipate longer wait times; flexible on colors/options if you’re in a hurry.
- Ford Ranger/Everest: broader torque and smarter gearing may trump peak horsepower for real-world use.
- GLC350e and Cayenne Hybrid: look for smooth power blending and brake feel; EV-only range is a bonus, not the whole story.
- GMC Sierra EV: charging reliability and towing behavior will be the make-or-break for road-trip warriors.
- Manual transmission trend: enthusiast models with three pedals are becoming rarer; resale on remaining manuals often holds strong.
Also trending: automotive hindsight and hot takes
Autocar spent time revisiting “should-have-been” stars that fizzled and Mercedes’ most controversial creations. It’s a timely reminder that risk is part of progress; sometimes you get an icon, sometimes a footnote. The trick is knowing the difference before you greenlight tooling. Easier said than done.
Conclusion
Today’s theme is pragmatism meeting passion. Toyota shores up the near term, Ford optimizes for how trucks are actually used, Ferrari wrestles with soul-searching, and enthusiasts lose a manual but gain a unicorn Mustang back on the market. The road ahead is never straight—good thing we like corners.
FAQ
-
Will Toyota’s production cut delay my car?
It could. Popular models may see longer waits. Check with your dealer on current allocations and consider flexible specs to speed delivery. -
Is a Ford Ranger EV canceled?
Not canceled—paused. Ford says current battery tech doesn’t meet core Ranger use cases like towing and remote worksite duty. Expect reassessment as tech and infrastructure improve. -
Why is the new Ranger/Everest said to be “less powerful”?
Peak output may be lower, but drivability can improve with fatter midrange torque and smarter transmission tuning. Real-world performance isn’t just a headline number. -
What is the Ferrari Luce EV?
It’s an all-electric Ferrari project drawing strong opinions in Italy. Details are still developing, but it signals Ferrari’s move to blend brand character with zero-emission tech. -
Is the VW Jetta GLI manual gone for good?
For the latest model, yes—the manual is being dropped. The dual-clutch remains, offering quicker shifts but less driver involvement.
Premium Accessories for Mentioned Vehicles
Custom-fit floor mats and accessories for the cars in this article











