Mikes E-bikes......Thanks so much for your thoughts and observations. I have been looking or shopping for ebikes about 1 month now. A steep learning process. But I see a very strong parallel with ‘ e cars’ . The primary driver on cost is the battery for both cars and bikes. The technology for both is on a steep trajectory. And maybe because of that, both depreciate like a rock. It makes very little sense to buy new unless forced to go that route due to self imposed constraints. Assuming you are in the business, sorry for that comment but I think you must admit to the unbelievably high value depreciation.
In reference to your comments about the future of the bike business. I will take a wild guess and say bike shops inventory is based on what the customers are asking for. How many customers are savvy in the ways and options of ebikes? My bet, not many. It really is a complicated subject with a myriad of options. This takes much study to just begin to understand the market. Nevertheless, I remain disappointed in what I have seen so far and do not discount what you predict. Ebikes are the future. I sure hope so.
Actually, that is incorrect.
It took me a while to learn this as I am new as well.
All bikes are the same. You have rims with tires on it, cranks, pedals, a chain, gears and brakes. Notice I said bikes and not e-bikes? What makes a Cervelo P3 a 5k bike? It has all the same things as a bike that you can get at Walmart. It has to do with components. Bikes cost more to save weight and have better components. Ebikes are the same, but . . . you now add in a motor, controller, display and a battery. Are there better batteries? Sure, there are better cells. Are there better motors? Now we are getting into a near-religious level war. So when you spend money, you are buying better components, better motor, better battery, etc.
It is also a misnomer that electric cars depreciate faster than ICE cars. They actually do not. If you want to look at Tesla Model S's and compare it to the same class cars, they do not depreciate faster than a Mercedes S550, or a BMW 7/8 series or a Lexus LS series. Go down to the Model 3 and it's the same issue. If you want to use a Volt as an issue, well there were a few things . . . one, people depreciate from list price, not from list price minus the 7500 tax credit someone got. That was almost 20% off the top of the Volt! Then there was a model year change. There are two electric cars that have taken it on the chin big time, the BMW I3 and the Nissan Leaf. Why? Because they suck.
The Ebike world is not much different than the motorcycle or bicycle world. Each year, there may be some decent size changes that make people want the latest. Cars, as they are a lot more complex, a 2018, 2019, and 2020 may be the same car, just different year and less mileage. That is a stable and mature market. Ebikes are in the growth stage.
I do not know the margins on ebikes that the dealers are getting. If I had to guess, it's probably in the 20 to 30% range. Much more than that, I don't think the margin exists. So let's do some quick math.
Specialized has, what, about 15 different ebikes? What is the cheapest? $2500 at list? If the dealer had 15 of just the cheapest bikes, the dealer would have 30k tied up in inventory. To have those 15 different ebikes, that is probably close to 50k in inventory, just for you to test drive. Now let's do some more math
Assuming that they will let you ride the parking lot in the bike and classify it as new. On a 4k bike, they made $1000. They need to sell FIFTY of those just to pay for that inventory of demo models. Is there 50 of those to be sold in a year? That is a question that is hard to answer.
If you want to see an interesting business model and I HIGHLY RECOMMEND THEM - look at Propel bikes. They have a store in Brooklyn and in Long Beach. They also do mail order. The store in Long Beach has EVERY Riesse and Mueller model on the floor as DEMOS. These are not CHEAP bikes. The cheapest is close to 5k. He labels his bikes as demos and I think what he does is sell them discounted at the end of the model year but sells new bikes he has in stock/orders. That took a LOT of capital.
In regards to trying the bike, I'd look around and see if there are any rental companies. Rent one for a day or two and see if you like it.
I'd also strongly suggest that you determine what kind of riding you plan on using it for and buy accordingly. Do not try and make something work for you. You will regret it.
Good luck