Friday, April 19, 2024 | Shawwal 9, 1445 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
25°C / 25°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Harley says EU duties could prompt price hikes

1371906
1371906
minus
plus

FRANKFURT: Harley-Davidson Inc could be forced to raise prices in Europe due to EU tariffs on US goods, hitting buyers of new motorcycle models when they are shipped to dealers later in the year, the head of its central European business said.


Earlier this week, the European Commission said it would start charging import duties of 25 per cent on a range of US products after Washington imposed tariffs on EU steel and aluminium at the start of June.


“Of course this will have an impact on the price. We will try and make it as painless as possible but no company can foot this alone,” Christian Arnezeder said in an interview.


A spokeswoman for the company said the group was still evaluating the potential impacts of EU duties, and that no decisions on pricing had been made.


Harley says it is getting hit by tariffs twice: Once by the EU import duty and once by a rise in raw material prices resulting from US steel tariffs.


For the moment, though, Harley does not need to raise prices as it used the roughly three months since Europe first threatened to impose duties on its motorcycles to prepare.


“We tried to get the current model to Europe as quickly as possible, as far as production allowed for it,” Arnezeder said.


He also said that the anticipation of tariffs boosted demand as customers sought to snap up motorcycles before prices rise.


“You could tell on the market, in talking to dealers, that some customers said, I want to fulfil my dream before any tariffs come into effect,” he said.


Struggling to overcome a slump in US demand, Harley has been aiming to boost sales of its motorcycles overseas to 50 per cent of total annual volume from about 43 per cent currently.


Europe, the Middle East and Africa accounted for little over 21 per cent of its global retail sales in the last quarter of 2017. — Reuters


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon