International Dealer News IDN 143 June/July 2018 | Page 4
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COMMENT • COMMENT • COMMENT • COMMENT • COMMENT • COMMENT •
Bring on the Middleweights
he latest slew of motorcycle and PTW registrations data from
Europe’s trade associations are less convincing in market
growth terms than the January and February results
suggested they were going to be.
As previously reported, in the context of the growth seen in the three years prior
to the data distortion of the 2016/2017 Euro 3 pre-registration issue especially
(prior to transition into Euro 4 production), the results for the 12 months of
2017 were better than they appeared to be according to the officially collated
registration statistics.
In turn, January and February of this year appeared to be proof of concept in
that they reinforced the suggestion that the underlying health of the market
was better than it appeared, and that 2018 was going to be another year of
growth.
Maybe not of the kind seen (in percentage terms)
in 2015 and 2016, but growth nonetheless.
However, whether or not the latest data is affected
by short-term factors such as poor weather and
holiday timings remains to be seen – at this stage
caution is advisable, for as far as we all know, it
could be the first indicators of an unwelcome
trend - a reality wake-up call, rather than seasonal
blip. We just don’t know yet – or do we?
There are suggestions emerging on the
international stage that the economic optimism
that greeted early 2018 indicators may have been
misplaced. The current thinking is that global growth is set to slow, importantly
in Europe as well as China, and one of the first victims of such uncertainty is
always consumer confidence.
As confidence evaporates, so does spending. We’ve seen how that cycle
unfolded at least three times in the past 10 years. But surely not again? Surely
not all dawns can be false? Just for once, can’t stability be the new black?
Drill down into the statistics released so far for March and April 2018, and it
becomes apparent that larger displacement machines are still selling well, with,
ironically, the loss in numbers being in the lower displacement power bands
and especially among mopeds and 50cc scooters.
he irony is that these are the lower cost machines, and the real worry is
therefore that we appear, again, to be seeing the entry level to be the choke
point – meaning we could be storing up real problems for the future as the
number of riders available to migrate up the price and power tree diminishes.
That said, there has been a major trend to later entry for the past 20 years
anyway. However, the trend in new motorcycle prices has been up for the past
decade…seriously up. List prices and the real prices achieved for current
production models have grown, indeed exploded, far ahead of inflation, as
manufacturers seek to recoup losses and fund more expensive technologies
and product standards and requirements.
Worse, the relative cost of entry-level machines (mopeds and scooters) has
T
actually increased even more than for larger displacement models, hitting the
market’s future hard.
These phenomena aren’t isolated to Europe. The same has been happening in
the United States. It is a factor of the “developed” markets, and one clearly seen
in the quarterly and annual financial reports of many of the manufacturers,
especially the Japanese manufacturers and those with major stakes in the “entry
level”.
The evolution of the “emerging” markets is well documented, and regardless
of short-term bumps in the road, many are saying that they have seen the future,
and that the future is Asian – both in terms of where sales are to be found, and
where, shorn of northern hemisphere overheads, the low-cost “entry level” and
increasingly popular middleweights are going to be coming from.
The members of ACEM have been pointing to the importance of export sales
from Europe to Asia, Africa and South and Central
America for years, and for years they have been
lobbying the EU (among others) to support their
ability to make cheap in Europe and sell well
elsewhere. And they have been right to do so.
rojects such as the British/US/European derived
and tuned but Asian made Royal Enfields,
Zongshen Nortons, Baja Triumphs and Mahindra
built BSAs and Jawas are set to shake up the price-
points and speak connivingly to the Millennial and
Centennial attitudes towards the (largely urban)
ownership and riding experiences in a way that
current pricing and production values are not yet managing to achieve.
Add into the equation the opportunity for “cost-effective, energy efficient and
comfortable ELVs” to take ownership of the urban riding landscape, then maybe
the apparent instability in the new registration statistics seen for the past 18
months has as much to do with the end-game play of the change of direction
for the market that appeared to have been kick-started by the financial crisis of
2008.
Maybe there is more to what is happening than “simply” the impacts of
regulations and consumer confidence. Maybe demographics, technology,
pricing, consumer confidence, environmental issues, entry level pathways and
lifestyle changes represent a combo perfect storm that is set to sweep all before
it?
Either way, there has to be an end to the cycle of economic uncertainty that
defines our times and to the ever-increasing list prices that manufacturers are
seeking to sell at in order for the PTW market, any kind of PTW market, to
prosper. Bring on the middleweights I say!
‘list prices
have
exploded’
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INTERNATIONAL DEALER NEWS - JUNE/JULY 2018
P
Robin Bradley
Publisher
[email protected]