Close X
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Motorcycle Industry In Canada Shifts Gears As It Copes With Low Loonie

The Canadian Press, 29 Dec, 2015 01:02 PM
  • Motorcycle Industry In Canada Shifts Gears As It Copes With Low Loonie
TORONTO — Canada's motorcycle industry is facing headwinds from the low loonie as the sector gears up for an annual round of trade shows early in the new year.
 
"If it's at par, it's good for the Canadian importer. But where it is now, you need to try to find every advantage you can," says Bob Ramsay, president of the Toronto-based Motorcycle & Moped Industry Council.
 
Canada's dollar has fallen to 11-year lows this month, largely because of persistently weak oil prices, slow global economic growth and the comparative strength of the U.S. dollar against other currencies.
 
Ramsay says the six big names of the motorcycle industry — the iconic American brand Harley-Davidson, Japan's Honda, Yamaha, Kawasaki, Suzuki and Germany's BMW — compete globally and have strategies to cope with currency fluctuations.
 
"You're going to see a very interesting market in the new year because all companies are going to be trying to ensure that they can compete on price, but also on the quality of products."
 
Harley-Davidson, for instance, recently replaced a longtime distributor with a new Canadian subsidiary more closely integrated into the company's global operations.
 
Anoop Prakash, who heads the new subsidiary, says Wisconsin-based Harley-Davidson can use its global reach and currency hedging to offset the loonie's increasingly weak buying power — something its former distributor couldn't do.
 
"The last couple of years, the pricing has really been driven by the currency," Prakash says. "With the start of the 2016 model year, when we took over in August, we did adjust pricing to be more competitive."
 
 
He says new riders generally begin with smaller, less expensive models that they can handle physically and financially and then move up over time - a key to Harley-Davidson's strategy.
 
"With the new pricing and the new model year, we've really pivoted towards attainability," Prakash says.
 
"So we have seven motorcycle models today under $13,000 and we're starting at $8,000. I think that demonstrates a great amount of accessibility to new riders and young riders wanting to grow the sport."
 
Ramsay says the Canadian industry has been successfully adapting to the 2008-09 recession, the more recent downturn in Western Canada and changing demographics.
 
"For many, many years, the motorcycle industry was doing very, very well based on the baby boomers and them having more disposable income," Ramsay says.
 
"Now that the baby boomers are almost halfway through their retirement phases, that market is still strong but we need to expand and grow the market across all segments of the population."
 
He says women, traditionally a very small segment of the motorcycle community, now account for 12 to 15 per cent of all new buyers for motorcycles, mopeds and the like.
 
Similarly, so-called millennials now in their 20s and 30s and "diverse" ethnic groups have been growing segments of the motorcycle industry's customer base, he says.
 
"We're trying to reach out and find ways to encourage them to get on a motorcycle or a scooter, rather than an automobile," Ramsay says.
 
Prakash says motorcycles provide a "great avenue for self expression" and for meeting like-minded people.
 
"And if you look at urban young adults, including women, it's a little bit about mobility and being able to explore things on your own terms," Prakash says.
 
The Motorcycle & Moped Industry Council has seven shows scheduled across Canada in January and February.

MORE National ARTICLES

Tour Bus Fire Cuts Short Whoopi Goldberg Show In New Brunswick

Tour Bus Fire Cuts Short Whoopi Goldberg Show In New Brunswick
Moncton RCMP say there was a fire in Goldberg's tour bus, which was parked at the back of Casino New Brunswick in Moncton.

Tour Bus Fire Cuts Short Whoopi Goldberg Show In New Brunswick

Ontario Town Puts On Christmas Parade For Terminally Ill Boy Evan Leversage

Ontario Town Puts On Christmas Parade For Terminally Ill Boy Evan Leversage
St George is putting on an early Christmas Parade Saturaday in case Evan Leversage, who has been diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumour, doesn't live until the holidays.

Ontario Town Puts On Christmas Parade For Terminally Ill Boy Evan Leversage

Toddler Turned Prime Minister: Reporter Recalls Justin Trudeau's First Quotable Words

Toddler Turned Prime Minister: Reporter Recalls Justin Trudeau's First Quotable Words
On an overcast Christmas afternoon in 1973, a handful of reporters and photographers huddled on the snowy pavement outside the front door of Ottawa's Civic Hospital, waiting for the prime minister.

Toddler Turned Prime Minister: Reporter Recalls Justin Trudeau's First Quotable Words

Justin Trudeau Takes More Inclusive Approach Than Harper To Climate Change Summit

Justin Trudeau Takes More Inclusive Approach Than Harper To Climate Change Summit
OTTAWA — Whatever else political opponents may say about Justin Trudeau's approach to reducing carbon emissions, they're not likely to curse his lack of inclusiveness.

Justin Trudeau Takes More Inclusive Approach Than Harper To Climate Change Summit

Peter Hoelke, 22, Suspected In Ottawa Bank Robbery Found Dead On Vancouver Island: RCMP

Peter Hoelke, 22, Suspected In Ottawa Bank Robbery Found Dead On Vancouver Island: RCMP
Police say a suspect in an Ottawa bank robbery has been found dead in the central Vancouver Island city of Nanaimo.

Peter Hoelke, 22, Suspected In Ottawa Bank Robbery Found Dead On Vancouver Island: RCMP

Halloween's Not Just For Kids Anymore: A Guide To Grown-up Fun On Oct. 31 In Vancouver

Halloween's Not Just For Kids Anymore: A Guide To Grown-up Fun On Oct. 31 In Vancouver
This year's Halloween party will be held in another charismatic Vancouver venue, the Fox Cabaret, which has served variously as an East Indian movie house

Halloween's Not Just For Kids Anymore: A Guide To Grown-up Fun On Oct. 31 In Vancouver