Harley-Davidson sees lower 2018 bike shipments, shares sputter
30-Jan-2018
Harley-Davidson shares sputtered on Tuesday after the motorcycle maker said its shipments fell short of its own target last year and predicted a decline in 2018 as well.
Harley-Davidson shares fell more than 5 per cent to $52.50 in pre-market trade after the company said its overall motorcycle shipments suffered a 7.9 per cent year-on-year decline in 2017 to 241,498 - at the low end of its earlier guidance for shipments of between 241,000 to 246,000 units.
Moreover, for 2018, the Milwaukee-based company said it expects shipments to fall again. It is forecasting motorcycle shipments of between 231,000 to 236,000 or down by about 2 to 4 per cent — with about 60,000 to 65,000 of those being shipped in the first quarter.
The drop in shipments came as Harley reported a 6.7 drop in global retail motorcycle sales to 241,788 last year, compared to 2016, led by an 8.5 per cent decline in the US.
Harley has previously said it aims to have 2m new riders by 2027. The company which is struggling to draw in millennial consumers is targeting the electric market as it seeks to grow its customer base. Harley said on Tuesday that it remains on target to launch its first electric motorcycle in 18 months.
The company also said that it would close its assembly plant in Kansas City and merge those operations into those of its plant in York, Pennsylvania, resulting in 400 net job loss.
It expects to incur restructuring costs of between $170m to $200m and capital investment of about $70m over the next two years. It is also expects ongoing annual cash savings of between $65m to $75m after 2020.
“Our actions to address the current environment through disciplined supply and cost management position us well as we drive to achieve our long-term objectives to build the next generation of Harley-Davidson riders globally,” said Matt Levatich, chief executive.
In the fourth quarter, sales were down 9.6 per cent in total, with an 11.1 per cent slide in the US and a 7.7 per cent fall overseas.
In the fourth quarter, net income fell to $8.3m from $47.2m in the year ago period. That translated to earnings per share of 5 cents, down 81 per cent from 27 cents in the year ago quarter.
Profits were hurt by a $53.1m tax charge associated with the enactment of the US Tax Cuts and Jobs Act and a $29.4m pre-tax charge for a voluntary product recall. Adjusting for one-time items, earnings of 47 cents a share topped the average analyst estimate of 45 cents, according to a Thomson Reuters poll.
Revenues for motorcycles and related products rose 12 per cent from a year ago to $1.05bn, just ahead of estimates.