A 76-year-old multimillionaire just learned a lesson the auto industry has long resisted: money doesn’t make you untouchable.
Anders Wiklöf, CEO of a company worth more than $400 million, was fined roughly $142,000 after driving 18.6 mph over the speed limit in Finland. The penalty wasn’t a publicity stunt. It was math. Finland calculates traffic fines as a percentage of income, and in Wiklöf’s case, that meant paying the equivalent of about 14 days of earnings for a single offense.
He said he regretted it. He said the speed limit had “suddenly” dropped from 43 mph to 31 mph before he was clocked at 50 mph. But this wasn’t a one-time lapse. This was his third speeding violation. He was hit with about $113,000 in 2013 and roughly $75,000 in 2018. This time, authorities added a 10-day license suspension.
Finland’s system leaves little room for excuses. Police access a central taxpayer database to determine income. A so-called day fine is calculated using daily disposable income, roughly half of daily net earnings. The more excessive the speed, the higher the financial hit.
This is what accountability looks like.
For years, high-performance cars have been marketed as symbols of status and power. Speed sells. Aggressive acceleration numbers fill commercials and social feeds. Yet when those numbers translate into real-world speeding, the risks aren’t theoretical. They’re measured in injuries, fatalities, and preventable crashes.
Wiklöf’s fine may be pocket change compared to the world’s most extreme speeding penalties, but it underscores a hard truth: reckless driving isn’t a luxury perk. Even billionaires and government ministers have been caught and fined. In the United Kingdom, a single speed camera generated $3.1 million from one location alone, a reminder that enforcement isn’t rare—it’s relentless.
The broader industry takeaway is unavoidable. Speed limits are not suggestions. They are safety thresholds. When drivers treat them as optional, governments step in. Finland’s approach strips away the illusion that wealth buys freedom from consequences.
This wasn’t just a costly mistake. It was a public reckoning. And it sends a warning to anyone who believes horsepower outranks the law: the road doesn’t care how rich you are, and neither do regulators when they decide enough is enough.