National Post (National Edition)

Harley shares sink on loss, lacklustre turnaround plan

- GABRIELLE COPPOLA

Harley-Davidson Inc. shares plunged after the motorcycle manufactur­er reported a surprise loss in the fourth quarter and unveiled a turnaround plan that failed to impress investors.

The Milwaukee, Wisc.-based company reported an adjusted loss per share of US44 cents on Tuesday, missing analysts' consensus estimate for a 23-cent profit and below the 20 cents it posted a year ago. Motorcycle shipments fell 48 per cent in the quarter.

Harley shares experience­d a drop as low as 22 per cent in early trading, falling 19 per cent to US$32.50 as of early afternoon., the sharpest decline in almost a year.

Revenue from motorcycle­s and related products fell 39 per cent in the fourth quarter to US$531 million as Harley reduced inventory and shifted its release of new models from fall to the first quarter of this year.

In its overhaul plan, the manufactur­er said it's aiming for low double-digit growth in earnings per share and “mid single-digit” growth in motorcycle revenue by 2025. Harley plans to achieve that by investing more in its core heavyweigh­t-bike segment — a category that has been shrinking across the industry — and by setting up a standalone electric-motorcycle division.

Harley is hoping that will end a six-year streak of falling sales in the U.S., which made up 58 per cent of Harley's total deliveries in 2020. It sold 103,650 bikes in its home market last year, a 22 per cent drop and the lowest level in at least a decade.

Chief executive officer Jochen Zeitz, a branding whiz who successful­ly revived sneaker company Puma SE in the late 1990s, also said he would pour new effort into increasing sales of parts and accessorie­s and Harley-Davidson apparel. He's hired a veteran marketer from his Puma days to aid in that project.

Zeitz's “Hardwire” strategic plan straddles both its past of roaring gas-powered bikes and an electric future. It calls for investing US$190 million to US$250 million annually, in part to develop Harley's electrific­ation technology that lags behind Asian and European rivals.

The company announced an equity grant to 4,500 Harley workers in to promote internal buy-in of the plan.

The first non-American CEO in the company's 118-year history, Zeitz has scaled back his predecesso­r's overseas ambitions, culled the new model pipeline, and starved dealers of inventory to raise prices. Now he has to find growth beyond an aging U.S. customer base, a problem that has bedevilled past Harley CEOs.

 ?? DAVID PAUL MORRIS / BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Harley-Davidson motorcycle shipments fell 48 per cent
in the fourth quarter, the manufactur­er revealed.
DAVID PAUL MORRIS / BLOOMBERG FILES Harley-Davidson motorcycle shipments fell 48 per cent in the fourth quarter, the manufactur­er revealed.

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