KEY POINTS
  • Harley was thrown into the spotlight of Trump's trade war last June.
  • The EU tariffs are costing the Wisconsin-based motorcycle manufacturer about $100 million a year, CEO Matt Levatich said.
  • The EU smacked duties on $2.4 billion worth of U.S. products after Trump levied tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from Europe last year.

As President Donald Trump's international trade war rages on, Harley Davidson is trying to mitigate the damage of retaliatory tariffs the EU placed on U.S. motorcycles that are costing the company about $100 million a year CEO Matt Levatich said Monday.

"Europe is the big issue for the company, about a $100 million a year run rate that we are covering in order to protect our business in Europe, protect our market share, protect our volume, protect the viability of our distribution channel," Levatich said on CNBC's "Squawk Alley."