The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Harley bracing for one-two punch of tariff damage

-

Harley-Davidson, one of the first American companies Donald Trump pledged to help after taking office, is bracing for a onetwo punch of harm at the hands of the president.

The motorcycle maker is warning that Trump’s tariffs on steel and aluminum could drive up costs. European leaders’ threats of retaliatio­n — which have specifical­ly called out the iconic American company — also risk hurting sales overseas.

Harley’s role as an American icon has contribute­d to Trump evoking the company or its industry when he attacks other countries for what he says are unfair trade practices. It’s also one of the first names on the tip of other leaders’ tongues when they push back. This easy-to-politicize role is looking more like a liability than a strength at a time that the Milwaukee-based manufactur­er is struggling with sluggish demand for its big bikes.

Trump’s trade policies — and the retaliatio­n they may inspire — are “probably not going to help them out in the short term,” Gerrick Johnson, an analyst with BMO Capital Markets, said by phone. “It’s ironic,” since the president praised the company so quickly after moving into the White House, he said.

Harley supports free and fair trade, Michael Pflughoeft, a spokesman, said in an emailed statement. He said steel and aluminum tariffs would boost raw material costs regardless of where the company is sourcing them and said the impact of punitive taxes that could be introduced in response would have a “significan­t impact” on its sales, dealers, suppliers and customers.

The tariffs on U.S.-built motorcycle­s that European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker floated last week would primarily hit Harley. While the company sold 61 percent of its bikes in the U.S. last year, Europe was its No. 2 market, accounting for 16 percent of deliveries to retail buyers.

Trump’s plan to levy steel and aluminum imports isn’t the first time the president’s trade policies have hurt Harley.

Chief Executive Officer Matt Levatich was a supporter of the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, which could have lowered barriers for its bikes in some of the largest markets for motorcycle­s in the world. Trump withdrew from the longplanne­d trade pact in January 2017.

A week later, the president hosted Levatich and other Harley executives and union leaders for a White House listening session and praised the company.

“We want to make it easier for business to create more jobs and more factories to be made in the U.S., and you’re a great example of that,” Trump said at the time.

U.S. motorcycle sales have continued to slump since then, spurring Harley’s decision in January to close a plant in Kansas City, Missouri, eliminatin­g about 260 jobs. The state’s Republican and Democratic senators and representa­tives last month asked Levatich to reconsider and said they learned of plans to shut the factory through media reports.

 ?? JACQUES DEMARTHON / AFP/Getty Images ?? A Harley-Davidson Softail black which belonged to the late French musician Johnny Hallyday is seen on display in Paris.
JACQUES DEMARTHON / AFP/Getty Images A Harley-Davidson Softail black which belonged to the late French musician Johnny Hallyday is seen on display in Paris.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States