Sharp decline in machine tool orders
09.09.2019
Orders continue their downward trend in the machine tool industry in the second quarter. The VDW reports that many sectors are currently reluctant to invest.
Orders received by the German machine tool industry in the second quarter of 2019 were 22 % down on the same period last year. Orders from Germany fell by 28 %. 18 % fewer orders were received from abroad. Orders received fell by 21 % in the first half of 2019. Domestic sales were down 19 % in this period, with foreign sales 23 % lower.
“In the second quarter, orders are once again more than twenty percent down on last year's strong figures,” said Dr. Wilfried Schäfer, Executive Director of VDW (Verein Deutscher Werkzeugmaschinenfabriken — German Machine Tool Builders' Association), commenting on the result. “The base effect can no longer disguise the global decline in investment in mechanical and plant engineering,” Schäfer continued.
The machine tool industry is not immune to the factors that are creating so much turbulence in the global economy as a whole and that are currently the subject of much discussion: “We are in the same boat as the other major international suppliers. Orders for machine tools have collapsed worldwide. Many countries are now having to pay the price for the almost daily international disputes being picked by politicians,” says Schäfer.
The machine tool sector is a pure supplier of capital goods and equipment to industry, and as such is exposed to pressure from weak demand in the major customer industries, the engineering sector and the automotive industry. The latter is additionally undergoing a protracted period of uncertainty as a result of the tentative transformation process towards new drive technologies and is cutting back investment accordingly.
Within the triad of suppliers, the Europeans are still performing most strongly. Orders from eurozone countries “only” fell by 5 % over the first six months, while those from non-eurozone countries were down by 28 %.