So they may still be hosed. They need to come up with almost 600M USD in three months and many of the suppliers they used to have that just got 30% of their A/R paid with almost zero hope for more will probably tell KTM to f off and expect no more shipments. Especially when KTM seems to have done nothing to address the immense fundamental problems. Giving them any credit would be good money after bad. COD only (or maybe even work down from a retainer) and KTM has no money to do COD.
If they can't pay me COD, I'd be out. I'm not throwing more money at them in the hopes I get a little bit of past money back. Sending them more stuff that costs me money and they don't bother paying for would not be happening. PS, there was inflation while you were out of commission, prices are now 10% higher for you.Yeah if I was a KTM supplier I'd be ******, but...
KTM also has them in a position, where they can say (without saying it), "Well, if you keep supplying us, in the future we can pay it back... but if you don't keep supplying us we definitely won't be around to pay you back." So... bit of a rock and a hard place for the suppliers unless they're willing to walk away from that kind of money out of sheer principle.
And if they're a corporation trying to maximize shareholder value, do the suppliers care more about principles or do they care more about what's best for business?
I'd be a little concerned about putting big bucks into one of their larger displacement bikes and then seeing the company go belly up or struggle so much that parts and warranty service suffers.
Your money of course, but would savings be so large that you'd want to risk it?
Other issue is the resale value of a bike where the manufacturer is bankrupt or where parts are going to be scarce. Ask former Victory owners what it was like to try and sell their bikes once Polaris pulled the plug.
First, I think there is still value in KTM, and someone is going to keep it going in some form.
If BMW buys it it will be for the off road models, particularly the dual sports and the 690. Everything else will drop.
The new 390's built by Bajaj will come to market, I saw GP Bikes has the new 390 ADV on their website for around 8K as a pre-order. The off road bikes and the DS 350/500 are certainties I think along with the big single, though production quantities probably will be ratchetted down.
The question is street bikes. They don't (and NEVER did) need 790 and 890 versions of the same basic platform. Given the the cam failures of that platform do/should they continue with it or just sell it off to CF Moto? Do they sell enough of the Super Duke range to keep it? I know they work well, but they have to be the ugliest think on 2 wheels this side of a Suzuki Madura.
The Lc8 v-twin is a well sorted motor and has proven to be reliable, and the ADV platform is well done so do they continue with the ADV bikes?
I think their plan coming out of restructuring will be:
Spin off Gas Gas trials bikes and discontinue other production.
Husqvarna will continue with the dual sports, and the inline twin models. (I would have discontinued all Husky)
KTM will keep the off road models relatively untouched, but may stop with the special editions and the models that cannibalize sales from each other. All parallel twins with be discontinued, maybe offered only as Husky. The 1390 Super Duke and Adventure will continue without the SDGT and the street focused Adventure. Depending on government subsidies and requirements the battery electric dual sport will continue.
And the Super Dukes will continue to be Super Ugly.