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Harley-Davidson to lay off
740 workers
Milwaukee-based motorcycle maker says a strike
at its largest plant is forcing layoffs and output
cuts.
February 6 2007: 1:17 PM EST
BOSTON/CHICAGO (Reuters) -- Harley-Davidson is
laying off 740 workers and cutting production
at two sites because of a strike at its largest
motorcycle plant, the company said.
Negotiators for the company and the strikers
planned to meet with a federal mediator today,
Harley said. No details on the meeting were made
public.
Nearly 2,800 workers at Harley's York, Pennsylvania,
plant, which makes some of the company's most
profitable motorcycles, walked off the job on
Feb. 2 after their contract expired. Harley is
seeking a variety of concessions from the workers.
In a statement posted on its Web site, dated
Feb. 5, Harley said it would reduce production
of engines, transmissions and components at two
plants that supply parts to the York facility.
That will mean the temporary layoff of about 740
workers at the plants in Menomonee Falls and Tomahawk,
Wisconsin, it said.
"The toe bone's connected to the foot bone
and the foot bone's connected to the ankle bone,"
said Bob Simonson, an analyst at Robert W. Baird.
"There are inter-relationships here."
A spokesman for the Federal Mediation and Conciliation
Service confirmed the meeting between the two
sides today but declined to provide further details.
Union officials were not available for immediate
comment. The workers are represented by the International
Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers.
Penny per share per day
Analysts estimate the strike could reduce the
company's earnings by about 1 cent per share per
day. Analysts on average expect Harley to earn
98 cents per share in the first quarter.
In a note to clients, RBC Capital Markets analyst
Edward Aaron said that dealers who carry the motorcycles
- an icon for the nation's aging baby boomers
- view the strike as a positive in its early days,
as it will provide them an opportunity to sell
down existing inventory.
"This can only be a positive event if Harley
has been over-producing motorcycles," Aaron
wrote. "To acknowledge that Harley has been
over-producing is to acknowledge that Harley has
been over-earning."
Harley earnings speed past Wall Street
Simonson said, "If they can't resolve it
in a reasonable amount of time, there will be
impacts that will be greater two weeks from today
than they are today on a monetary basis, and a
heck of a lot greater two months from today than
they are two weeks from now."
Worker concessions sought by Milwaukee, Wisconsin-based
Harley include a two-tier wage-and-benefit plan.
The company says it is trying to avert a cost
crunch like the one that has hammered Detroit
automakers.
Investor reaction to the strike in its early
days has been muted. The price of Harley (Charts)
shares rose 0.6 percent in midday trade on the
NYSE. The shares have risen about 4 percent since
their Feb. 1 close, the day before the strike.
Harley's stock has lagged competitors in the
last three months. It has risen 0.9 percent, compared
to gains around 11 percent for Ducati (Charts),
Honda (Charts) and Polaris (Charts).
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