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Deleted member 4210
Guest
Nearly every year at this time, and late fall, I do a recon on a lot of brands, and their various dealers to scan whats happening with prices. This year, there are numerous mid drive brands showing generous discounts (unusual due to MAP policies), and yet ironically, prices on hub drives models keep creeping up (most likely due to tariffs, and/or the fact many have held their prices steady for past several years, and now just can't hold them.)
Last season it was Haibike dealers showing massive discounts, and they still are, but seems to be fewer (we all know what happened with them last year so won't delve into that here), but now its many brands, both large and small. My guess is that for a number of them, the mid drives are just not moving out of stores in the quantities they expected.
There are more mid drive models out this past year (2018) than ever before, and even Panasonic has gotten into the mid drive game, packaging it with their batteries (and sounds like controls, display, controller, etc.)
I have a suspicion, and its only a gut feel, that total ebike industry sales in the US will be relatively flat year over year, and that some vendors will do exceedingly well, while others will go off the radar screen. (including a couple of the more notable names). IF this happens, I don't blame the tariffs, which will be more coincidental to other bigger trends, but the US has seen some really great ebike growth since 2015, and any flatness could be more due to the overall economy in general, and then some industry re-positioning from some over-shoots on their estimates. (leading to more discounting this year by the way, than we have seen in the past 4 years).
And yes, like all prognostications, I could be totally wrong. China trade deal could be resolved, with tariffs (ebikes category included) going away, and all sorts of consumer buying enthusiasm could re-kick in, with the entire economic system breathing a big sigh of relief. Or if the stock market resumes its volatility from late last year, that might put a damper on consumer buying.
Anyway, keeping fingers crossed that its just another great year for more ebike sales, and more people getting into it in a big way.
Last season it was Haibike dealers showing massive discounts, and they still are, but seems to be fewer (we all know what happened with them last year so won't delve into that here), but now its many brands, both large and small. My guess is that for a number of them, the mid drives are just not moving out of stores in the quantities they expected.
There are more mid drive models out this past year (2018) than ever before, and even Panasonic has gotten into the mid drive game, packaging it with their batteries (and sounds like controls, display, controller, etc.)
I have a suspicion, and its only a gut feel, that total ebike industry sales in the US will be relatively flat year over year, and that some vendors will do exceedingly well, while others will go off the radar screen. (including a couple of the more notable names). IF this happens, I don't blame the tariffs, which will be more coincidental to other bigger trends, but the US has seen some really great ebike growth since 2015, and any flatness could be more due to the overall economy in general, and then some industry re-positioning from some over-shoots on their estimates. (leading to more discounting this year by the way, than we have seen in the past 4 years).
And yes, like all prognostications, I could be totally wrong. China trade deal could be resolved, with tariffs (ebikes category included) going away, and all sorts of consumer buying enthusiasm could re-kick in, with the entire economic system breathing a big sigh of relief. Or if the stock market resumes its volatility from late last year, that might put a damper on consumer buying.
Anyway, keeping fingers crossed that its just another great year for more ebike sales, and more people getting into it in a big way.