Hit hard by the recession, Harley Davidson scored their first quarterly loss in 16 years. And motorcycles delivered to dealers fell off by 27% in 2009, down to 223,023 units. For 2010, Harley Davidson expects to witness sales falls of another 5-10%. This might place 2010 production figures around 201,000 to 212,000 units.
Tight credit for consumers for new higher end motorcycle purchases has really hurt the legendary American made brand. Increased competition from import brands from Japan, China and Italy continues to lure buyers to cheaper bikes who can't afford the higher priced models from Harley as well. In fact, all American brands such as Harley Davidson, Victory and Ridley fit into a higher priced market for heavier bikes. And in a down economy, even premium American brands like this suffer.
Harley reported a fourth quarter loss of $218.7 million dollars, which also translated into a 94 cents a share loss for the Harley stock. Last year, the company reported profits $77.8 million, and 34 cents a share.

Comments (1)
They almost went out of bus... (Below threshold)1. Posted by fremont | January 24, 2010 1:40 PM | Score: -1 (1 votes cast)
They almost went out of business in the 80's but famous free market guy Reagan put a huge duty
on large Japanese bikes. That's when you saw
the foreign bikes with 699cc engines.
I had a neighbor who waited six months for one
after he paid for it. At 5 in the morning he'd be warming it up for ten minutes because an automatic choke cost an extra $75 and he'd already spent $15,000 on a motorcycle that couldn't take a small Japanese sport bike.
1. Posted by fremont | January 24, 2010 1:40 PM |
Score: -1 (1 votes cast)
Posted on January 24, 2010 13:40