Wednesday, 9 August 2017

Harley-Davidson

More lay-offs loom at Harley as Q2 sales plummet in U.S.A.

The shocking headline news is that Harley-Davidson’s second quarter domestic U.S. sales were down a massive -9.3 percent compared to the second quarter of 2016, a result that is way worse than the one they were expecting, in a peak selling season where total domestic U.S. new motorcycle sales were down by around 7 percent for the quarter.
This puts Harley’s domestic sales down by - 7.9 percent for the first half of the year and leaves their domestic market share in the 601+cc category at 48.5 percent for the second quarter (compared to 49.5 percent for Q2 in 2016) and at 49.6 percent for the first half year 2017. The company is citing “weak industry sales and soft used bike process” as among the Q2 impactors.



Harley CEO Matt Levatich: "Our biggest opportunities for growth are outside the United States”

The company says that dealer inventory is down by approximately 7,200 motorcycles year on year and that it will further cut production with its revised unit shipments now forecast at between 241,000 and 246,000 for the full year 2017, 39,000 to 44,000 of them in Q3 – down by between 10 and 20 percent from Q3 2017. Total second quarter shipments were 81,807 units (down by -7.2 percent on Q2 2016 and are 152,638 for the half year (down by -10.8 percent of the first half of 2016).
Originally the company had forecast that 2017 would be “flat to modestly down for them,” but they are now having to accept that the “new normal” CEO Matt Levatich referenced in February means “down double digits” for the year, with massive restructuring of channel inventory levels not just a first quarter fix, as originally suggested.
The cut in production will result in further lay-offs, likely of hourly paid staff, as the company continues to “aggressively manage our cost structure,” Levatich said, in acknowledging the “unexpected magnitude of the industry softening in the second quarter.”
Managing supply, further reducing costs, and continuing pursuit of their previously announced 10-year strategies, not least the training of 2 million new riders and introduction of 100 new models, are the three pillars of recovery that the Harley ranch is bet on at this time – with much now hinging on market reaction to the new 2018 model year introductions.
No surprise then that, contrary to widespread speculation, it would appear that Harley has decided not to bid for Ducati after all.
CFO John Ollin and CEO Matt Levatich both acknowledged that “our biggest opportunities for growth is outside the United States,” and both have reaffirmed their stated objective of seeing at least 50 percent of sales being made internationally within 10 years.
Harley recently announced a plan to build an assembly plant in Thailand to service the ASEAN region – believed to be a direct response to U.S. withdrawal from the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) free trade deal that would have seen tariff barriers reduced; a withdrawal that Levatich is on record as saying “would have helped us a lot.”
Harley’s total worldwide motorcycle retail sales were 81,388 in the second quarter, down by -6.7 percent, with worldwide sales -5.7 percent YTD. Of that 31,720 units were international sales, which is down by -2.3 percent for the second quarter, and are -2.1 percent for the YTD.
Their Europe, Middle East and Africa region was the best performing of their export markets, with sales down by only 1.6 percent for the second quarter and -2.1 percent YTD; their European 601+cc market share was up by 0.2 percent for the second quarter at 10.3 percent, but remains -0.9 percent for the YTD at 9.4 percent.
Harley added 13 more dealers internationally during the second quarter, and has reconfirmed its intention to grow its international dealer network by between 150 and 200 new outlets between 2016 and 2020.
Shares in Harley-Davidson tanked by nearly 11 percent within an hour of trading opening on the day the second quarter figures were released (July 18) in the heaviest daily trading seen in more than two years. The share price recovered slightly during the day (from a 12-month low), but were left trading some 25 percent lower than their 12-month high of $62.94 in March.