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Broad Arrow toasts Global Icons: Online sales success during busy January

Words: Nathan Chadwick | Photography: Broad Arrow

Broad Arrow has concluded its recent three-part online sales programme, entitled Global Icons: Online, posting €18.3 million in total sales.

The series included Global Icons: Europe Online and Global Icons: UK Online, which closed on January 30, 2026, as well as Global Icons: Memorabilia Online that closed on February 1. Live previews were held at the Roland-Garros Stadium and Salon Rétromobile in Paris, alongside Broad Arrow offices in the UK and Europe. Broad Arrow reports nearly 800 bidders from 35 different countries, and in the end it achieved a 90 percent sell-through rate.

The sale marked the first public offering of the Benetton car in which Michael Schumacher secured his maiden Formula 1 win. The 1992 Benetton B192-05, driven by Schumacher at Spa-Francorchamps, sold for €5.082m – although it was expected to reach €8.5m-plus. Given the wider results we’ve seen in Paris (as reported here), the hype for F1 cars appears to have cooled during the winter – as noted in our Paris season report, the Artcurial Jean Alesi car went for below estimate, and an ex-Coulthard and Räikkönen 2002/2003 McLaren didn’t sell. Meanwhile, over at RM Sotheby’s, the ex-Schumacher/Irvine 1997 Ferrari F310 B also failed to find a new owner. One wonders whether Drive To Survive might perk up interest…

Other notable results from Global Icons: Online included a 2003 Ferrari 360 Challenge Stradale, which sold for €561k, exceeding its upper estimate and setting a European auction record for the model. The car was finished in Azzurro California and was one of 51 examples fitted with Lexan sliding windows.

A 1990 Ferrari Mondial t Cabriolet, finished in Verde Scuro over tan leather, sold for €99k, exceeding its high estimate by more than 50 percent. The appeal of rare colours appears to be persisting into 2026: a brace of Rosso Corsa Ferrari Testarossas failed to sell, while the Rosso Corsa 1992 Ferrari 512 TR sold for a mid-estimate €184,250.

For Enzo-era cars, the above 1965 Ferrari 275 GTS that had lived its entire life in Germany and was Classiche Red Book-certified in 2018, sold for €1.386m. A 1975 265 GT4 BB went for €473k, a 1971 Dino 246 GT sold for €440k and a 1966 330 GT 2+2 Series II reached €206,250.

Several Lamborghini models were sold, including a 1971 Miura P400 S, one of 338 built, which went for €1.716m. The car was finished in Giallo Miura over Nero leather and had covered approximately 2000km since a restoration was completed in 2011. A 1986 Countach 5000 QV sold for €792k, while a 2003 Murciélago with a six-speed manual gearbox sold for €302,500.

Elsewhere, a 1964 ASA 1000 GT Berlinetta achieved €79,750, also above estimate, and additional results included a 1955 Lancia Aurelia B24 S Spider at €660k, a 1971 Ferrari Dino 246 GT ‘M-Series’ at €440k and a 2003 Porsche 911 Carrera RUF 3.6 Kompressor at €162,250. The UK online auction saw a 2001 Ferrari 550 Barchetta Pininfarina sell for £335,500, a 1998 Porsche 993 Turbo for £211,750 (pictured above) and a 1924 Vauxhall 30-98 OE-Type Velox go for £173,250.

The memorabilia auction included items associated with Ayrton Senna and Michael Schumacher. A replica 1988 Senna Bell helmet sold for €55,625, a McLaren rear wheel from the 1990 San Marino Grand Prix went for €33,750, a Schumacher 1994 Benetton helmet sold for €44,375 and Schumacher’s 1995 Benetton overalls reached €23,750.

For more information on the online sales, head here.

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