A rare Ferrari F40 LM with racing history was the standout lot at RM Sotheby’s Paris auction on Wednesday – and it was one of an impressive seven million-pound-plus sales at the event.
The F40 was the subject of prolonged bidding both in the room at Place Vauban and over the phone and eventually sold for €4,842,500 (£4.2m), in the process setting a new world record for the model.
The more you know about the car, though, the less surprising that figure seems. The LM was the original competition version of the fabled F40, and only 19 were built. This one’s probably the most famous, having twice competed in the 24 Hours of Le Mans, finishing 12th in 1995.
It was far from the only big hitter, though, with a 1956 Porsche 550 RS Spyder making €3,042,500 (£2.64m) and a 1966 Ferrari 275GTB/6C selling for €2,860,000 (£2.48m) – the latter sale taking place immediately after the auction had finished.
Other classics to change hands for big figures included a 1957 Mercedes-Benz 300SL – every auction has to have one, it seems – in Roadster form, which made £784,903, a 1966 Shelby 427 Cobra (£674,794) and a 1960 Ferrari 250GT (£552,450).