The top 10 neighbors split into two distinct clusters: a tight group of ultra-premium auto brands at the high end, and a secondary band of technology and finance brands pulling in a different direction.
The shape is two-peak. Jaguar (social) leads at 0.88, followed closely by Rolls-Royce Motor Cars at 0.87 and Maserati at 0.87 — three Auto subcategory neighbors within a narrow 0.02-point range that form the first, dominant peak. Mercedes-AMG (0.83), Land Rover USA (0.82), Bugatti (0.82), and BMW (social) (0.80) extend that Auto cluster through the mid-range. All seven of these neighbors share Land Rover's own Auto subcategory, making the first peak a same-kind concentration of high-end marques.
The second peak emerges at the lower end of the top 10: Aston Martin (0.77) and Bentley Motors (0.76) remain within Auto, but Lamborghini at 0.74 marks the trailing edge of the cluster. All 10 neighbors are Auto brands — no Finance, Technology, or Fashion subcategory appears in the top 10 — which means the two-peak structure here is less about cross-kind divergence and more about a gradient within the same category: the first peak clusters around European luxury-performance marques with the tightest audience overlap, while the second peak captures brands whose audiences share some but not all of that composition.
The overall picture is a tightly bounded audience that tracks almost exclusively across premium and ultra-premium automotive brands, with no meaningful cross-category pull in the top 10.