Once rivals, Honda,
Yamaha Motor announce scooter tie-up
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[October 05, 2016]
By Naomi Tajitsu
TOKYO
(Reuters) - Japan's Honda Motor Co Ltd and Yamaha Motor Co Ltd on
Wednesday said they were joining forces to develop scooters for the
domestic market, burying the hatchet on a decades-old rivalry and
consolidating production in response to a shrinking motorcycle market.
Honda, the world's largest motorcycle brand by sales, said it would
start producing Yamaha's 50-cc engine scooter models for the domestic
market at its plant in southern Japan by the end of 2018, based on the
manufacturing platform for Honda's small scooter models.
The two companies said that pooling resources would be a way to mitigate
increasing costs to develop new scooter technologies and keep pace with
ever-tightening emissions regulations in the face of falling domestic
scooter sales.
"The slowdown in the scooter market seen in the past few years has made
business in the sector very difficult for both companies, so partnering
will have merits," Honda operating officer Shinji Aoyama told reporters.
Both companies said they would continue to market scooters separately,
and that the partnership was limited to Japan. By far the largest market
for both companies is Asia ex-Japan, where a growing demand for scooters
from an expanding middle class has created their biggest battleground.
Yamaha managing executive officer Katsuaki Watanabe said having Honda
manufacture Yamaha models on contract would likely be more cost
efficient than Yamaha's current arrangement of producing the vehicles in
Taiwan and exporting them back home.
The two companies said they would also jointly update their respective
delivery scooter models, which Honda may also manufacture for Yamaha,
while also considering collaboration on electric scooter projects.
The partnership stands in contrast to a bitter rivalry between Honda,
the top seller of scooters in Japan, and second-ranked Yamaha which
dates back to around 1980, when both companies released dozens of
motorcycle models and competed over distribution and pricing to increase
market share.
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A woman walks past a logo of Honda Motor Co outside the company's
dealership in Tokyo, Japan, January 27, 2016. REUTERS/Yuya Shino
"There's absolutely no bad feeling or ill will left over from that
period," Yamaha's Watanabe said.
Since then, overall domestic sales of motorcycles and scooters have
fallen sharply due to a slump in demand from a rapidly growing elderly
population and falling interest in vehicle ownership among younger
consumers particularly in the past few years.
Sales fell 10.6 percent to 373,000 motorcycles in the year ended March
2015, their second year of decline and a drop from the 1.2 million
motorbikes sold in 1995.
Motorcycles are a key part of both companies' product line-ups, although
domestic sales contribute little to global revenue.
(Reporting by Naomi Tajitsu; Additional reporting by Maki Shiraki and
Chang-Ran Kim; Editing by Eric Meijer and Christopher Cushing)
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