Harley-Davidson to cut 260 jobs

Cycle-maker closing Missouri plant as demand weakens

Harley-Davidson, which across the U.S. has dealerships like this one in Oakland, Calif., is seeing bike sales stall.
Harley-Davidson, which across the U.S. has dealerships like this one in Oakland, Calif., is seeing bike sales stall.

A deepening slump in U.S. motorcycle demand is spurring more job cuts and a plant closure at Harley-Davidson Inc.

The Milwaukee-based motorcycle-maker will close its factory in Kansas City, Mo., and consolidate production in York, Pa., according to a statement Tuesday. The restructuring will eliminate about 260 U.S. jobs, Chief Executive Officer Matt Levatich said on a conference call. President Donald Trump praised the company last year as a "great example" of a business creating jobs and building factories in the country.

Harley is consolidating its U.S. manufacturing presence as its bike sales fall on every continent. And the pain won't end this year: The company projected global sales will drop as much as 4.9 percent more in 2018 after a 6.7 percent decline last year.

Harley's stock fell more than 8 percent Tuesday, closing at $50.84.

U.S. motorcycle ridership has stalled in spite of Levatich's efforts to introduce models for first-time buyers and teach more Americans how to safely get around on bikes.

The issue for investors isn't the fourth-quarter miss, which was complicated by a number of one-time items, David Beckel, an analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., said in a note to clients.

"The story is, or continues to be, that Harley is in the throes of a significant secular decline," he wrote.

Sales in the crucial U.S. market fell 11 percent in the fourth quarter and 8.5 percent for the year. Harley executives said they're drawing more consumers to their brand, but couldn't say during the call with analysts how many are buying used instead of new bikes.

As bike demand weakens, one of Harley's rival brands is calling it quits. Polaris Industries Inc., which started winding down its Victory motorcycle operations early last year, projected adjusted profit of as much as $6.20 a share for 2018, well below analysts' $6.99 a share average estimate. The Medina, Minn.-based company's stock plunged as much as 17 percent, the biggest drop since November 2008, before closing down 13.3 percent.

The Kansas City plant closing will cost Harley as much as $200 million through 2019, then result in annual cash savings of $65 million to $75 million after 2020. Levatich declined to say how much production capacity will be reduced. At the same time, the company is building a factory in Thailand that will assemble bikes using components shipped from the U.S.

The U.S. plant, near Kansas City International Airport, employs about 750 workers. Harley-Davidson built the nearly 400,000-square-foot plant in 1998; it produced the Softail, Sportster and Street motorcycles.

In November, the company announced the plant was also producing the company's newest motorcycles to hit the market -- its Sport Glide model.

Unions representing Harley workers accused the company in September of trying to "systematically dismantle" its hourly workforce. A spokesman for the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers said the union didn't have an immediate comment Tuesday.

Harley reported profit of 5 cents a share in the last three months of the year, well below the 46 cent average analyst estimate. The company reported a $53.1 million charge related to the U.S. tax bill and a $29.4 million charge for a product recall.

"Harley can't get younger people into the hobby, and the bikes are too big to be transportation in Europe or Asia," Kevin Tynan, a Bloomberg Intelligence analyst, said in an email. "That future is really dark."

Information for this article was contributed by staff members of The Kansas City Star; and by John Lippert of Bloomberg News.

photo

AP

This Harley-Davidson Sportster Roadster XL1200CX sits on display last spring at a dealership in Glenshaw, Pa.

Business on 01/31/2018

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