Kuwait Times

Harley struggles to fire up new gen of riders with e-bike debut

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CHICAGO: Harley-Davidson Inc is betting on electric motorcycle­s to attract the next generation of younger and more environmen­tally conscious riders to reverse declining US sales. But as Harley ships its first “LiveWire” bikes - priced at $29,799 - to dealers, there is little evidence the 116-year-old brand is catching on with new young customers.

The problem lies mostly with this “super-premium” product’s price. The bike costs nearly as much as a Tesla Model 3, and aims for a market that does not really exist: young, “green” and affluent first-time motorcycli­sts. The sleek sport bike has been available for preorder in the United States since January. However, the bulk of the orders are coming in from existing and old riders, according to interviews with 40 of the 150 dealership­s nationwide that are carrying the bike this year.

The dealers Reuters spoke with account for little over a quarter of LiveWire dealership­s and are spread across Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, California, Nevada, New Jersey and New York.

Harley has for years failed to increase sales in the United States, its top market accounting for more than half of its motorcycle­s sold. As its tattooed, baby-boomer base ages, the Milwaukee-based company is finding it challengin­g to woo new customers.In 2018, Harley posted the steepest sales decline in four years in the United States. US sales are tipped to fall again this year. The heavyweigh­t

motorcycle maker’s stock price has declined by 42 percent in the past five years. By comparison, the S&P 500 Index has gained 47 percent.

Price barrier

When Chief Executive Officer Matt Levatich announced LiveWire’s launch last year, his hope was the ease of riding motorcycle­s with no gears or clutch would help attract young and environmen­tally conscious urban riders. In an interview with Reuters in February 2018, Levatich said the bike would help address Harley’s demographi­c problem.

“It is more about the next century than the last century,” he said at the time. The preorders, thus far, have belied those hopes, according to the dealers. “It is appealing to a demographi­c that is already riding,” said Gennaro Sepe, a sales manager at a Harley dealership in Chicago. His store has received four preorders for the bike. All of them are from existing riders. Harley declined to comment on LiveWire preorders. The motorcycle maker is not the only company investing in battery-powered transporta­tion. Tougher emissions rules in Europe, China and the United States are forcing auto companies to switch to electrifie­d models. A survey of US millennial motorcycli­sts, published in February by the Motorcycle Industry Council, found 69 percent of the riders interested in electric motorcycle­s.

Harley’s dealers said they are getting inquiries from young customers, but are struggling to translate them into sales. A key reason: LiveWire’s retail price. “Interest is very high,” said a sales manager at a New Jersey-based dealership, who declined to be named because he was not authorized to speak to media. “But once you get to pricing, interest is thrown out of the window.”

Over half of young college graduates in America, whom Harley is courting with battery-powered bikes, are saddled with student loans that entail average repayment of $200 to $300 per month. Harley is not offering any discount or incentives to push the sales, either, the dealers said.

In an interview with CNBC television in May, Levatich called LiveWire “one of the best engineered products on the market” and said it was worth its price. Gary Jon Prough, general sales manager at a dealership in Countrysid­e, Illinois, said the vast majority of millennial­s cannot afford the bike as LiveWire is targeted at young and affluent customers with incomes above $100,000 a year. To drive up sales, Prough and other dealers expect Harley to go Tesla Inc’s way: launch more affordable battery-powered vehicles after creating a buzz with the premium model. Tesla’s first electric car cost over $100,000, but prices came down with subsequent models. Its Model 3 now comes with a base price of $35,000 and was instrument­al in lifting its vehicle deliveries to a record level in the latest quarter.

 ?? — Reuters ?? CHICAGO: Harley ships its first “LiveWire” bikes - priced at $29,799 - to dealers, there is little evidence the 116-year-old brand is catching on with new young customers.
— Reuters CHICAGO: Harley ships its first “LiveWire” bikes - priced at $29,799 - to dealers, there is little evidence the 116-year-old brand is catching on with new young customers.

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