If the wire leads are stiff and hard to bend, they are likely the stock ones. With the plug cap removed, look at the end of the lead. You should be able to see a clean center conductor wire in the center. This is where the plug caps screw into to make a firm connection. If the end of the lead is damaged, you can cut off a 1/4 inch or so to renew the end and the plug cap should then screw on tightly. This can only be done so many times before the wire then becomes too short. So, beware. While you have the plug caps off measure the resistance from inlet to outlet. Should be 5K Ω +/- 10%. (However, some caps are 10K ohm.) Resistance of infinity means an open or bad plug cap, that should be replaced. It appears that the rubber boots that seal between cap and wire have gone missing, and the PO has attempted to use black tape as a band-aid to seal water out.
If you can run the bike in a darkened garage, problems with leakage can be found along the ignition leads as visible arcing. You want any sparks in the system to occur at the spark plug tip, not elsewhere.
If the engine is running rich, dark deposits will be made on the spark plug tips. This will rob your ignition of power as the dark deposits are carbon, which is conductive and can siphon off electrical energy.
Don't forget to check the items in my previous post.
Cheers,