This forensic audit report was commissioned to map the economic footprint of Bugatti Rimac d.o.o. and evaluate its level of “Economic Complicity” regarding the State of Israel. The investigation focuses on the intricate web of corporate ownership, strategic Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), technological sourcing, and supply chain dependencies that define the modern Bugatti entity. Following the 2021 restructuring that formed Bugatti Rimac, the brand has transitioned from a traditional automotive manufacturer into a high-technology mobility asset deeply integrated with the Israeli innovation ecosystem.
The audit identifies a significant shift in the brand’s economic gravity. While Bugatti’s direct commercial interface with Israel remains limited to niche service channels and brand-adjacent goods, its operational viability—specifically in the domains of electrification and autonomous mobility—is increasingly reliant on Israeli intellectual property. Furthermore, the entity’s beneficial owners, primarily the Rimac Group and Porsche AG (under the Volkswagen Group umbrella), act as primary conduits for institutional capital flowing into Tel Aviv’s “Silicon Wadi.”
This report categorizes these findings into direct technological dependencies (Project Verne/Mobileye), strategic equity involvements (Porsche Ventures), and indirect institutional complicity (Champion Motors and MAN military logistics). Based on the aggregated weight of these factors, Bugatti Rimac is assigned a complicity ranking reflecting its status as a high-value node in a supply chain that actively bolsters the economic and technological capabilities of the target jurisdiction.
To understand the economic footprint of Bugatti, one must first deconstruct the complex corporate architecture that governs it. The entity “Bugatti” no longer exists in a vacuum; it is a joint venture that synthesizes the heritage of the Volkswagen Group with the agile, venture-backed aggression of the Rimac Group. This hybrid structure creates multiple pathways for capital and technology to flow between Croatia, Germany, and Israel.
On November 1, 2021, the automotive landscape witnessed a pivotal restructuring event: the formation of Bugatti Rimac d.o.o..1 This entity serves as the umbrella corporation for both the Bugatti and Rimac Automobili brands. Headquartered in Sveta Nedelja, near Zagreb, Croatia, the joint venture represents a strategic divestment by the Volkswagen Group, transferring operational control to a younger, technology-focused partner while retaining significant equity interest.1
The ownership split is definitive and critical for forensic analysis:
This
division places the decision-making authority—and thus the strategic direction of supply chain sourcing—firmly in the hands of the Rimac Group.6 However, the
stake held by Porsche AG ensures that the venture remains tethered to the broader strategic imperatives of the Volkswagen Group. From a complicity standpoint, this dual ownership structure doubles the exposure: the entity is now subject to the investment strategies of both the Rimac Group’s diverse shareholder base and the Volkswagen Group’s institutional legacy.
Forensic examination of the governance structure reveals that Mate Rimac serves as the Chief Executive Officer of the joint venture.1 The management board also includes representatives from Porsche AG, such as Lutz Meschke, who serves as a member of the supervisory board.3 This cross-pollination of executive leadership ensures that strategic initiatives, such as the adoption of autonomous driving platforms or sensor suites, are harmonized across the partner entities. Consequently, when Porsche AG commits to a strategic partnership with an Israeli firm like Mobileye or TriEye, the technological fruits of that partnership are readily available to the Bugatti Rimac ecosystem.
The controlling shareholder, Rimac Group, is not merely a car manufacturer; it is a technology holding company valued at over
billion following its Series D funding round in 2022.5 The composition of its investor base is of paramount importance to this audit, as these investors exert influence over the company’s strategic priorities and global alliances.
The capitalization table of the Rimac Group includes:
The entry of SoftBank Vision Fund 2 and Goldman Sachs into the Rimac Group’s capital structure in 2022 9 signaled a shift from purely automotive backing to global financial and technology capital. SoftBank is a prolific investor in the Israeli technology sector, having backed numerous AI and cybersecurity firms in the region. Their involvement in the Rimac Group suggests a strategic alignment with “deep tech” solutions—technologies often sourced from Israel—to drive the valuation of the group.
Furthermore, the capital injection of
million from these investors was explicitly earmarked for expanding production capacity and completing the new Rimac Campus.5 This campus, which serves as the R&D nerve center for Bugatti Rimac, is the physical site where Israeli technologies (such as the Mobileye integration for the Verne robotaxi) are implemented and tested.11 Therefore, the capital provided by these global funds acts as the fuel for integrating Israeli intellectual property into the Rimac (and by extension, Bugatti) supply chain.
While Rimac Group holds the operational majority, the forensic trail inevitably leads back to the Volkswagen Group ecosystem. Porsche AG, holding
of Bugatti Rimac and roughly
of the Rimac Group directly 7, acts as the anchor tenant of this corporate structure.
Porsche AG itself is a subsidiary of the Volkswagen Group, which is majority-owned by Porsche Automobil Holding SE (Porsche SE).13 This hierarchical consolidation is crucial because it links Bugatti Rimac to the broader geopolitical and economic activities of the entire Volkswagen conglomerate.
| Entity | Role in Hierarchy | Relevance to Israel |
|---|---|---|
| Bugatti Rimac d.o.o. | Operating Entity | Consumer of Israeli Tech (Mobileye, Valens) |
| Rimac Group | Parent Company ( |
Partner of Israeli firms; backed by SoftBank |
| Porsche AG | Parent/Partner ( |
Direct Investor in Israeli Startups (Porsche Ventures) |
| Volkswagen Group | Ultimate Parent of Porsche AG | Supplier to IDF (Champion Motors); JV partner in Israel |
| Porsche SE | Holding Company | Anchor investor in mobility funds targeting Israel |
This vertical integration means that Bugatti is not an island. It is a constituent part of a massive industrial organism that has identified Israel not just as a market, but as a critical “Innovation Hub” essential for its future survival in the era of autonomous and connected mobility. The policies set in Wolfsburg (VW HQ) and Stuttgart (Porsche HQ) regarding engagement with Tel Aviv trickle down to the engineering labs in Sveta Nedelja.
The most profound economic complicity identified in this audit is “Technological Complicity.” In the modern automotive sector, the value of a vehicle is increasingly defined by its software stack, sensor arrays, and autonomous capabilities. For Bugatti Rimac, and specifically its sister division Rimac Technology, the roadmap to the future is paved with Israeli intellectual property.
The clearest evidence of direct technological sourcing is the “Verne” project. Named after Jules Verne, this initiative was incubated within the Rimac Group and formally unveiled in June 2024.11 Verne is an autonomous urban mobility ecosystem—essentially a “robotaxi” service—that represents the group’s pivot from low-volume hypercars to high-volume mobility solutions.
The Verne vehicle is a purpose-built, two-seater electric platform designed without a steering wheel or pedals.16 While the physical chassis and drivetrain are engineered by Rimac in Croatia, the “brain” of the vehicle—the system that allows it to perceive and navigate the world—is entirely Israeli.
Forensic analysis of the partnership agreements reveals that Verne utilizes the Mobileye Drive™ platform.15 This is not a superficial component supply arrangement; it is a deep architectural dependency. The Verne vehicle cannot function without the hardware and software stack provided by Mobileye.
Key components of this integration include:
By selecting Mobileye as its autonomy partner, the Rimac Group (and by extension the Bugatti Rimac ecosystem) has committed substantial R&D budget and future revenue shares to an Israeli corporation. This partnership legitimizes and financially supports the Israeli autonomous vehicle sector, which is a dual-use industry with significant crossover into military robotics and surveillance.
Mobileye Global Inc. is the central pillar of Israel’s “Autotech” sector. Headquartered in Jerusalem, the company was acquired by Intel in 2017 but retains its operational base and R&D leadership in Israel.20 Mobileye is a dominant force in Advanced Driver-Assistance Systems (ADAS) and autonomous driving, supplying dozens of global OEMs.
The relationship between the Volkswagen Group (Bugatti’s effective parent) and Mobileye is longstanding and deep. In 2018, Volkswagen, Mobileye, and Champion Motors announced a joint venture called “New Mobility in Israel” to deploy a commercial robotaxi service.21 This initiative was designed to serve as a global beta site for autonomous mobility-as-a-service (MaaS).
For Bugatti Rimac, the reliance on Mobileye goes beyond the Verne project. The Rimac Technology division, which develops components for Bugatti and other hypercar brands (e.g., Aston Martin, Koenigsegg) 23, operates in an environment where Mobileye is the standard-setter for vision processing.
Economic Implications:
Beyond the primary autonomy platform, the forensic audit identified specific sourcing relationships with other Israeli technology firms that provide critical subsystems for the “connected car.”
Innoviz Technologies (LiDAR): Innoviz is a leading Israeli provider of solid-state LiDAR sensors.25 These sensors are essential for Level 3 and Level 4 autonomous driving, as they provide high-resolution 3D mapping of the vehicle’s environment.
Valens Semiconductor (Connectivity): Valens, headquartered in Hod Hasharon, Israel, is the inventor of HDBaseT technology, which is the global standard for long-reach, high-speed connectivity.31 In the automotive sector, Valens provides the MIPI A-PHY compliant chipsets that allow the massive amounts of data from cameras and sensors to travel to the central computer without latency.32
Technological Complicity Assessment:
The integration of Mobileye, Innoviz, and Valens creates a “triple-threat” of dependency. The perception (LiDAR), the intelligence (Mobileye Drive), and the signal transmission (Valens) are all sourced from the Israeli technology sector. This renders the Bugatti Rimac ecosystem structurally reliant on the continued stability and innovation output of the Israeli economy.
The audit now turns to the flow of investment capital. Bugatti Rimac’s stakeholders are not passive consumers of Israeli technology; they are active investors in it. Through venture capital arms and innovation hubs, they inject millions of euros directly into Israeli startups, fostering the growth of the sector.
Porsche AG, owning
of Bugatti Rimac, operates “Porsche Ventures,” a global venture capital unit with a dedicated office in Tel Aviv.34 This office is tasked with identifying disruptive technologies and securing equity stakes in the companies developing them. This is a form of “Strategic FDI” where the investment is intended to yield both financial returns and strategic competitive advantages for the Porsche/Bugatti ecosystem.
Key Portfolio Holdings in Israel:
| Company | Sector | Technology | Investment Date | Strategic Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TriEye | Semiconductors | SWIR (Short-Wave Infrared) Sensing | 2019 35 | Enables vision in adverse weather; technology originated from academic military research.37 Crucial for high-speed safety. |
| Valence Security | Cybersecurity | SaaS Security / Supply Chain Defense | 2022 35 | Protects the software supply chain of connected vehicles from cyber threats. |
| Tactile Mobility | Data / Software | Virtual Sensing / Tactile Data | 2021 38 | Analyzes tire-road interaction to improve vehicle dynamics and safety systems. |
| Anagog | AI / Analytics | Edge AI / Mobility Behavior | 2018 36 | optimizes energy usage and driver personalization directly on the vehicle’s computer. |
| Fleetonomy | Mobility SaaS | Fleet Management | 2018 39 | Acquired by Via. Provided algorithms for managing fleets of autonomous or shared vehicles. |
Deep Dive: TriEye and Dual-Use Tech: The investment in TriEye is particularly significant. TriEye developed a CMOS-based Short-Wave Infrared (SWIR) sensor. SWIR cameras can see through fog, dust, and smoke—capabilities that are critical for autonomous vehicles but were previously cost-prohibitive and restricted to military applications.37 By investing in TriEye, Porsche Ventures effectively funded the commercialization of a military-grade technology. This creates a feedback loop where automotive capital supports the refinement of sensors that have obvious utility for the Israeli defense sector (e.g., for armored vehicles or drones operating in obscurant conditions).
Deep Dive: Valence Security: As vehicles become “software-defined,” cybersecurity becomes paramount. Valence Security provides solutions to secure the “mesh” of third-party SaaS integrations.39 For a company like Rimac, which integrates software from various suppliers (including Mobileye), securing the supply chain is a critical operational requirement. Porsche’s investment here ensures that the Group has priority access to top-tier Israeli cyber defense tools.
Beyond Porsche Ventures, the wider Volkswagen Group operates “Konnect,” a dedicated Innovation Hub located in Tel Aviv.41 Established in 2018, Konnect’s mission is to “spearhead the discovery, evaluation, and integration of Israeli pioneering technologies” into the Group’s vehicles and factories.41
Operational Scope:
By maintaining this physical presence in Tel Aviv, the Volkswagen Group (and by proxy Bugatti) signals a long-term commitment to the Israeli economy. It acts as a bridge, constantly ferrying Israeli innovation into the heart of the European automotive industry.
Perhaps the most ambitious strategic FDI initiative is the “New Mobility in Israel” joint venture. Announced in 2018, this partnership brought together the Volkswagen Group, Mobileye, and Champion Motors to deploy a commercial self-driving ride-hailing service in Israel.21
Structure of the JV:
Status and Complicity: While the timeline for full commercialization has shifted (originally targeted for 2022 21), the project represents a massive vote of confidence in the Israeli jurisdiction. It involves the direct deployment of Volkswagen assets onto Israeli roads, managed by an Israeli importer (Champion), powered by Israeli tech (Mobileye). This project effectively turns Israel into a “global beta site” for the Group’s most advanced mobility concepts.47
The success of this venture directly benefits the Israeli government, which has committed to supporting the project through legal/regulatory frameworks and infrastructure access.21 This collaboration normalizes the presence of autonomous testing in the public domain and positions Israel as a leader in the regulation of future mobility.
While Bugatti Rimac’s direct operations are focused on hypercars and technology, its corporate lineage ties it to entities heavily involved in the Israeli military-industrial complex. This “Indirect Complicity” is a standard vector in forensic auditing, as capital and strategic direction are often shared across the conglomerate.
Champion Motors, a subsidiary of the Allied Group, is the exclusive importer for Volkswagen, Audi, SEAT, ŠKODA, and CUPRA in Israel.21 While Bugatti vehicles are not sold through standard dealerships due to their exclusivity, Champion Motors represents the commercial face of Bugatti’s parent company in the region.
Military and Police Contracts:
Champion Motors is a key supplier to the Israeli Ministry of Defense (MoD) and the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).
Strategic Role: Champion Motors is not just a car dealer; it is a strategic partner in the “New Mobility in Israel” JV.21 By partnering with Champion, the Volkswagen Group (and indirectly its subsidiaries) strengthens the position of a company that is structurally integrated into the logistics of the Israeli security establishment.
A more lethal dimension of complicity arises through MAN Truck & Bus, a brand under the Volkswagen Group’s Traton SE division. MAN is a
shareholder in Rheinmetall MAN Military Vehicles (RMMV), a joint venture with the German defense giant Rheinmetall.50
The HX Truck Family: RMMV produces the HX series of tactical trucks (HX60, HX58, HX77, HX81). These are “military off-the-shelf” (MOTS) vehicles designed specifically for logistical support in combat zones.52 They are used for transporting troops, ammunition, and heavy equipment (like tanks).53
Relevance to Israel: While the IDF heavily relies on US-supplied Oshkosh and AM General trucks due to FMF (Foreign Military Financing) aid 55, the global proliferation of MAN military trucks and the use of MAN chassis for specialized applications remains a factor. The “MAN” brand is part of the same corporate family as Bugatti. Profits from the VW Group’s diverse portfolio, including heavy trucks, contribute to the overall financial health of the conglomerate that funds Bugatti’s R&D.
Furthermore, RMMV’s success in global markets (Germany, UK, Australia, etc.) strengthens the defense capabilities of NATO allies, which often share interoperability standards with Israel. The existence of a military truck division within the same group as a hypercar brand illustrates the dual-use nature of the conglomerate’s engineering prowess.
The forensic audit identifies a phenomenon termed here as the “Luxury-Defense Feedback Loop.” This describes the cycle where high-end automotive requirements drive investment in military-grade technologies, which are then re-commercialized for the mass market.
The technologies scouted by Porsche Ventures and implemented by Rimac Technology are inherently dual-use.
The involvement of high-status luxury brands like Bugatti and Porsche in the Israeli ecosystem serves a “sanitization” function. It frames Israel as a hub of “Mobility” and “Innovation” rather than a conflict zone. The “New Mobility in Israel” initiative explicitly markets the country as a “Startup Nation” ideal for beta-testing futuristic technologies.47
Based on the forensic evidence gathered and analyzed in this audit, Bugatti Rimac d.o.o. is assigned a complicity ranking of Moderate to High.
Justification for Ranking:
The economic footprint of Bugatti Rimac is far larger than the sales of its hypercars would suggest. It is a technological conduit. The reorganization of 2021 transformed the brand from a boutique French manufacturer into a key asset within a global conglomerate (VW/Porsche/Rimac) that views Israel as an indispensable technology partner.
The capital generated by the Rimac Group’s investors—including SoftBank and Goldman Sachs—is being used to integrate Israeli “brains” into European “bodies.” Whether through the autonomous Verne robotaxi or the advanced sensors in a next-generation hypercar, the Bugatti Rimac entity is actively contributing to the economic vitality and technological supremacy of the Israeli high-tech sector. Consequently, for the purpose of supply chain auditing, Bugatti Rimac must be viewed as an entity with significant “Economic Complicity” in the Israeli market system.