International Dealer News IDN 141 February/March 2018 | Page 8

STAT ZONE Germany: motorcycle registrations German registrations - Year-to-date 2017 -14.21 percent for 2017 200,000 2016 TOTAL PTW 50,000 -14.21% 100,000 2017 -19.10% 150,000 units, the Euro 3 models that were pre-registered in the final quarter of 2016 will still have ben “new” machines as far as consumers are concerned and will have been sold during the first half of this year, artificially reducing the apparent market performance. The pre- registrations pushed the German 2016 statistics to show an artificially high +15.01 percent for the year, German new motorcycle registrations have been +5.59 percent and +10.75 percent for 2015 and 2014 respectively. Total PTW registrations are said to have been -19.10 percent for 2017 in Germany at 139,831 units (compared to 172,846 in 2016 and 150,550 in 2015). The German market bottomed-out at 122,519 total new PTW registrations in 2010, and notwithstanding the effects of the recent statistical anomalies, has grown steadily ever since. As is usual these days, BMW’s R 1200 GS continues its inexorable march towards The latest statistics released by the German motorcycle industry trade association (IVM) for the period to the end of December 2017 are affected by the year-ago rush to pre- register unsold 2016 Euro 3 inventory before the December 31st, 2016 deadline. In motorcycle registration terms, the market was said to have been down by -79.09 percent in December on low volumes (2,006 units), having been (theoretically) down by - 22.46 percent in November, -14.18 percent in October and - 22.46 percent in September. For the full year new registrations in Germany are down by -14.21 percent at 100,877 units. However, allowing for the Euro 3 pre- registration effect and other factors affecting dealer inventory and unit sales for 2017, the market in Germany was, in all probability, broadly ‘flat’ for 2017, in the region of between -2.5 and +2.5 percent in motorcycle sales terms. Though heavily incentivised MOTORCYCLE MOTORC RC CYCLE domination, with 8,333 units reported as sold in Germany in 2017, leaving Yamaha’s MT-07 eating its dust in second with 3,493 units sold, followed by the Kawasaki Z 650 (2,665 units), Honda’s CRF 1000 ‘Africa Twin’ (2,562 units) and Kawasaki’s Z 900 (2,203 units); next come the BMW R nineT, Honda NC 750 X, KTM 690 Duke, BMW S 1000 R and KTM 1290 Superduke R. With 7 models in the top 20 selling list, it is again no surprise that BMW was motorcycle (and total PTW) market share leader for 2017 in Germany, with 24,750 motorcycle units sold for a 24.53 percent increased market share. Honda is second (12,653 units sold for a 12.54 percent market share), with Yamaha third (10,874 units sold for a 10.78 percent market share), followed by Kawasaki, KTM, Harley-Davidson, Ducati, Triumph, Suzuki, with Husqvarna tenth. Italy – new motorcycle registrations +8.53 percent for 2017 8 INTERNATIONAL DEALER NEWS - FEBRUARY/MARCH 2018 Italian registrations - Year-to-date 2017 2016 +5.41% 2017 200,000 TOTAL L PTW PT 50,000 +8.53% 100,000 150,000 units), the Yamaha XMax 300 (5289 units) and the Kymco Agility 125 R16 (4,451 units). The top-selling motorcycle was the BMW R 1200 GS (3,755 units), followed by Honda’s Africa Twin (3,216 units) and their NC 750 X (2,454 units). The Yamaha Tracer 900 sold 2,296 units; the Ducati Scrambler 800 sold 2,241 units. June was the biggest month for sales in Italy in 2017; followed by May, July, March and April. Of the total of 204,406 motorcycles and scooters sold, the biggest sector was the 251 to 500cc market (52,413 units); followed by the sub 125cc market (50,340 units), 126 to 200cc (25,255), 751 to 1000cc (24,684), over 1000cc (22,259) and 601 to 750cc (20,976 units). In motorcycle terms the largest sector in Italy is Naked style bikes (30,973 units in 2017), followed by Enduro machines (26,402) and Touring bikes (11,505 units). According to the latest data released by ANCMA (the Milan based motorcycle industry trade association for Italy), the Italian motorcycle market is bucking the trend seen in much of Europe, despite suffering the same Euro 3 crossover inventory effects as elsewhere, with new motorcycle registrations up by +8.53 percent for 2017 at 82,475 units. This is up from the 75,996 units cited for 2016 despite the boost to final quarter registrations by the rush to pre-register Euro 3 inventory, and substantially up from the 62,506 registrations recorded for 2015. Allowing for mopeds and scooters