Harley-Davidson to move production over tariffs


Harley Davidson has said it will move some production of motorcycles destined for the EU overseas after Brussels retaliated against President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

The Milwaukee-based company said it will not pass on the cost of tariffs to its customers as that would have a lasting detrimental impact to business in the region, which is its second largest market.

Production could be shifted to plants in Brazil, India and Thailand.
In a regulatory filing, Harley Davidson said: “To address the substantial cost of this tariff burden long-term, Harley-Davidson will be implementing a plan to shift production of motorcycles for EU destinations from the US to its international facilities to avoid the tariff burden.
“Harley-Davidson expects ramping-up production in international plants will require incremental investment and could take at least nine to 18 months to be fully complete.”

Brussels imposed tariffs on a range of US-made products, including cosmetics, whiskey and cranberry juice. The levy on Harley-Davidson bikes has increased to 31% from 6%, the Milwaukee-based company said.
It believes that works out to be about $2,200 (£1,650) per bike it exports from the US to the EU.

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“In the near-term, the company will bear the significant impact resulting from these tariffs, and the company estimates the incremental cost for the remainder of 2018 to be approximately $30 to $45m,” Harley-Davidson said.
“On a full-year basis, the company estimates the aggregate annual impact due to the EU tariffs to be approximately $90 to $100m.”

Source: Sky

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