BMW reported a new company record for third quarter motorcycle sales, selling 26,755 BMW motorcycles in the quarter ended Sept. 30, 2012. The record result is a
1.7% increase over the 26,312 units sold in the third quarter of 2011.
The increase however was nearly offset by a dip in Husqvarna sales. BMW reports sales of 2,121 Husqvarna
motorcycles over the quarter, down from 2,550 units in the same period
last year. Combining both brands, the BMW Group sold 28,876 motorcycles
over the quarter, a sliver of an increase over the 28,862 units sold the
same quarter the year before.
The third quarter numbers are actually the reverse of BMW’s 2012
year-to-date results. Over the first nine months, BMW motorcycle sales
were down 1.1% to 85,944 units from 86,892 while Husqvarna sales
increased 21.0% to 7,356 from 6,080. This represents a 0.4% overall
increase in sales to 93,300 units from 92,972 units, a nearly negligible
increase but still better than the overall market contraction of 3% for
500cc and larger motorcycles over the first nine months.
The European economy had a negative influence on sales, with
consumers on the continent buying 11% fewer motorcycles in the first
three quarters. BMW fared better than most, seeing just a 7.7% decline
over the same period. Sales were particularly bad in Spain (-16.2%),
Italy (-28.6%) and Great Britain (-8.9%) compared to the first nine
months of 2011. BMW fared better in its home market with German sales up
1.4%. BMW also saw growth in France, selling 10.6% more motorcycles
than it did the same period last year.
BMW also saw an increase in U.S. sales, with Americans buying 11,420
BMW and Husqvarna motorcycles over the first nine months, a year-on-year
increase of 19.5%. BMW’s Brazilian sales also saw an increase of 48.9%
while Japanese sales increased 14.2%.
The record third quarter motorcycle sales translated to a record 358
million euros (US$459 million) in revenue, a year-on-year increase from
334 million euros. Despite the record figures, BMW’s motorcycle business
still operated at a loss of 4 million euros (US$5.1 million) before
tax. Still, that represents an improvement on the third quarter loss of
17 million euros before taxes in 2011.
Overall the first nine months, BMW’s motorcycle division saw revenues
of 1.22 billion euros (US$1.56 billion), compared to 1.18 billion euros
over the same period in 2011. Profit before tax, is up to 80 million
euros (US$103 million) from 60 million euros.
[Source: BMW by Dennis Chung ]
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