International Dealer News IDN 154 April/May 2020 | Page 14

THE BRADLEY REPORT NEWS BRIEFS Indian Motorcycle's new Challenger model is equipped with the Metzeler Cruisetec tyre as stock fitment - "with 122 hp and 128 ft-lbs of torque, the Cruisetec's performance characteristics will stand up to the demands the Challenger rider will inflict on the road," says Metzeler. There is confusion in the UK concerning the Government's announced plan to bring its ban on sales of internal combustion (and Hybrid platform) vehicles forward to 2035. The UK Department of Transport has now said that the new date is merely a consultation date and that it would not include motorcycles after all. Presumably they would be banned as of the original 2040 date - but there is no clarity, and the MCIA in the UK points out that the UK Government could decide to include motorcycles at any time of its choosing without consultation. The International Federation of Robotics (IFR) has announced that South Korea has doubled the number of industrial robots it has in operation within the past five years to 300,000, and now ranks third globally behind Japan and China. There has been a shake-up in the fiercely competitive UK motorcycle insurance market, with Bennetts Insurance coming under the same ownership (Ardonagh Group, through its Atlanta Investment Holdings subsidiary) as its long-time rival Carole Nash Insurance. The IVM in Germany has called on the German authorities to exempt automotive and motorcycle workshops and bicycle shops from the closure regulations. It cites mobility as crucial for coping with the coronavirus crisis and that use of cars, bicycles, scooters and motorbikes can minimise the risk of infection and relieve public transport. 14 Triumph While at press time we had not managed to ascertain production status at Triumph's UK production plant, there are to be job losses there anyway as production is moved from the UK to Thailand. CEO Nick Bloor has announced that up to 50 skilled production jobs could be lost at the Hinckley, UK headquarters as it shifts its remaining volume production to its Thailand facilities. At present all except for two of Triumph's line-up - the Tiger 1200 and Speed Triple - are already built in Thailand, with production transferring to the existing Triumph production line at Chonburi, one of the three it has in Thailand. It is understood that the UK production site will now become a low volume specialist facility for its Triumph Factory Customs programmes (TFC), specials, Moto3 race support and global R&D, creating twenty different jobs in the process. Of total production of around 65,000 motorcycles last year, only some 7,000 were built in the UK, and that capacity will now be reduced to around 4,500. Triumph says it will brand its UK facility as its "Centre of Excellence for Research and Development", with its Thai factory campus referred to as its "Centre of Excellence for Manufacturing". The changes will involve creation of "a new 16,000 sq ft, state-of-the-art, dedicated design centre" in the UK, and the installation of "a new bespoke assembly line to facilitate the more efficient production of specials, prototypes and the TFCs". In a statement, Bloor repeated Triumph's ambitions of seeing further growth in Asian markets, accepting that UK jobs would be lost as a result. "We want to maximise the growth opportunity for the brand globally, particularly in Asia. This is why we are increasing our design resources here in the UK and focussing our mass production capabilities in Thailand. "There will still be manufacturing capability in the UK, but the role of our facility in Hinckley will be reconfigured to enable us to create a more flexible and high-value capability. The move to a more specialist production facility does mean, however, that there will be between 40 and 50 layoffs from our manufacturing workforce in the UK." Ironically it is not as if the privately owned company is making the move due to short-term financial pressures as such - in the context of Triumph's scale of operations it is doing very well, so the switch is strategic. In December 2019 the company reported racking up pre-tax profits of around GBP£9.5m ($12.25m/ € 14.31m) for its last financial year and posted a £26.8m ($34.55m/€ 31.3m) increase in its global revenues, which peaked at £529.5m last year ($682.5m/€ 618.6m). As reported in IDN #153, after a period of 'radio silence', Triumph's non-equity joint venture with KTM share holder Bajaj Auto is moving ahead, with India built Triumph models (of various styles and in the 200 to 500 cc range) expected to be in dealerships worldwide in 2022. According to Triumph Motorcycle Chief Commercial Officer Paul Stroud, the first model is expected to carry a starting price tag in India of around € 2,550 (GBP £2,150/US $2,800) and Alpine: The new Triumph 'Alpine' edition - now to be produced along with the 'Desert' in Thailand. INTERNATIONAL DEALER NEWS - APRIL/MAY 2020 will be manufactured at Bajaj Auto's Chakan facility. Bajaj is to take over distribution of Triumph's existing large displacement models in India (where it currently sells around 1,000 bikes) and export and sell the new models worldwide wherever it has an existing sales structure. In January, MD Nick Bloor stated that Triumph's own dealer network in Europe, USA and elsewhere will also be 'in-play' when the models are in volume production, stating that "the products that will come out of the partnership will help attract a younger, but still discerning customer audience and is another step in our ambition to expand globally, particularly in the fast growing markets of South East Asia, but also driving growth in more mature territories like Europe". There has also been some speculation as to whether Bajaj and Triumph might strike a deal to make suitably tuned and compliant versions, possibly lightweight scramblers and 'trackers', available through KTM dealers in Europe and North America. However, it is believed that KTM owner Stefan Pierer's brand lust may instead have seen his eye settle upon Norton, which went into administration in the UK in January 2020. Though the news that Norton owner Stuart Garner sold the rights to the 961 platform to Chinese scooter manufacturer Jinlang just weeks before Norton went broke may make any deal for the Norton product line or IP less likely. Triumph themselves have emphatically said it is not in the market to "put the band back together" by bringing the Norton brand back under Triumph ownership. The last such relationship between the two brands (Norton Villiers Triumph, at Meriden, UK, in the 1970s) didn't end well! www.idnmag.com