Back when cats were first mandated, they were atrocious, and removing them was possibly the best thing you could do for performance. Things have changed a lot since the 70s.
In many instances, removing the cats in a modern car can actually cause worse performance than leaving them on. For high-revving, especially turbo engines, you want as little exhaust back pressure as possible. For high-torque engines, some backpressure actually makes for better performance.
Note the relative torque and horsepower numbers for your model year.
The engine was designed, built, and programmed for the cats. Removing them will require a pretty comprehensive approach to achieve efficiency.
And may result in a $500
per missing cat fine.
Can you tell that I'm generally against it? Not for any treehugger reasons, but for performance ones.
Woody