Toronto Star

Canada’s motorcycle sector shifts gears due to low loonie

Consumers can expect a ‘very interestin­g’ market in new year as brands compete on price, quality

- DAVID PADDON THE CANADIAN PRESS

Canada’s motorcycle industry is facing headwinds from the low loonie as the sector gears up for an annual round of trade shows early in the new year.

“If it’s at par, it’s good for the Canadian importer. But where it is now, you need to try to find every advantage you can,” says Bob Ramsay, president of the Toronto-based Motorcycle & Moped Industry Council.

Canada’s dollar has fallen to11-year lows this month, largely because of persistent­ly weak oil prices, slow global economic growth and the comparativ­e strength of the U.S. dollar against other currencies.

Ramsay says the six big names of the motorcycle industry — the iconic American brand Harley-Davidson, Japan’s Honda, Yamaha, Kawasaki, Suzuki and Germany’s BMW — compete globally and have strategies to cope with currency fluctuatio­ns.

“You’re going to see a very interestin­g market in the new year because all companies are going to be trying to ensure that they can compete on price, but also on the quality of products.”

Harley-Davidson, for instance, recently replaced a longtime distributo­r with a new Canadian subsidiary more closely integrated into the company’s global operations.

Anoop Prakash, who heads the new subsidiary, says Wisconsin-based HarleyDavi­dson can use its global reach and currency hedging to offset the loonie’s increasing­ly weak buying power — something its former distributo­r couldn’t do.

“The last couple of years, the pricing has really been driven by the currency,” Prakash says. “With the start of the 2016 model year, when we took over in August, we did adjust pricing to be more competitiv­e.”

He says new riders generally begin with smaller, less expensive models that they can handle physically and financiall­y and then move up over time — a key to Harley-Davidson’s strategy.

“With the new pricing and the new model year, we’ve really pivoted towards attainabil­ity,” Prakash says.

Ramsay says the Canadian industry has been successful­ly adapting to the 200809 recession, the more recent downturn in Western Canada and changing demographi­cs.

“For many, many years, the motorcycle industry was doing very, very well based on the baby boomers and them having more disposable income,” Ramsay says.

“Now that the baby boomers are almost halfway through their retirement phases, that market is still strong but we need to expand and grow the market across all segments of the population.”

He says women, traditiona­lly a very small segment of the motorcycle community, now account for 12 to 15 per cent of all new buyers for motorcycle­s, mopeds and the like.

Similarly, so-called millennial­s now in their 20s and 30s and “diverse” ethnic groups have been growing segments of the motorcycle industry’s customer base.

 ??  ?? Motorcycle-industry heavyweigh­ts have ways to cope with currency fluctuatio­ns.
Motorcycle-industry heavyweigh­ts have ways to cope with currency fluctuatio­ns.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada