Harley-Davidson’s Flat Tire: Demographics

 | Jun 27, 2013 02:29AM ET

Harley-Davidson, Inc. (HOG)

is an American icon. It’s also a well-managed company and one of those true rarities: a successful turnaround story. This is a company that was facing bankruptcy in the early 1980s yet managed to rebuild itself into the pride of American manufacturing…and the subject of countless case studies in MBA programs worldwide.

Harley’s management was able to pull off that coup by leveraging that intangible quality that is so hard to imitate: brand cachet. For a particular breed of leather-wearing motorcycle enthusiast, there is simply nothing on par with a Harley.

But all of that said, I wouldn’t touch the stock, or at least not at today’s prices.

At first glance Harley wouldn’t appear exceptionally pricey. It trades for 17 times trailing earnings and 2 times sales. This compares to 16 times earnings and 1.5 times sales for the S&P 500.

A modest premium is appropriate for an iconic company with Harley’s branding power (and not to mention its high return on equity of 25.8%), right?

Well, maybe. But Daimler (DDAIF)—a company that knows a thing or two about vehicle branding—trades for just 10 times earnings and 0.42 times sales. Yes, I realize it’s not an apples-to-apples comparison and that Harley runs a higher-margin operation in a business with fewer direct competitors. All else equal, Harley should trade at a slight premium to a larger automaker like Daimler.

But all else is not equal, and Harley has a serious growth problem. And it’s not one that will go away with a recovering economy.