COPIED
1 mins

EQUIPMENT SALES

WHAT HAPPENED?

Off-Highway Research has announced its predictions for global construction equipment sales for 2024, estimating that sales will fall 8% this year to 1.08 million units, following the 7% decline of 2023 and 6% drop in 2022. The company highlighted that these declines come after the abnormally high volume of machines sold in 2021 and describes it as a ‘return to normal’.

Off-Highway Research managing director, Chris Sleight said, “The construction equipment industry is a cyclical market. Downturns normally come with double-digit percentage falls in year-on-year equipment sales. Three years of single digit declines classify the current readjustment as a soft landing.”

For 2024 the company predicts a 6% decline for construction equipment sales in Europe, a 4% decline in China, a 10% decline in India, a 1-2% increase in Japan, a 10% decline in North America and a 3% increase in South America.

WHAT IT MEANS

Construction is a resilient industry, as well as traditionally a cyclical one, meaning that sales often rise until they get to a point where they are unsustainable and come crashing down. In recent years the sector has seen some of its highest ever sales, with global units sold estimated to be in excess of 1.3 million in 2021, the most ever recorded.

Against this background the decline in sales since 2021 has indeed been ‘soft’ – sales remained historically high in 2022 and were still strong in 2023.

Hopefully, the industry has avoided some of the steep declines it has seen in the past and sales will grow in the future at a rate that may be slower, but more sustainable.

WHAT’S NEXT?

Construction equipment sales are expected to pick up across all regions from the mid-2020s onwards. The long-term growth trend for the industry should mean that the extraordinary volumes achieved in 2021 might be regained towards the end of the decade as part of normal and sustainable cyclical growth. Sales in both 2027 and 2028 are predicted to exceed the 1.2 million mark.

The Chinese market is expected to recover and see sales slowly increase from 2024 onwards. Europe should remain steady and the North American market is predicted to remain relatively strong for the forseeable future.

PHOTO: ADOBE STOCK
This article appears in March-April 2024

Go to Page View
This article appears in...
March-April 2024
Go to Page View
IS THE INDUSTRY READY FOR A DISRUPTOR?
We recently hosted our first-ever in-person Construction Technology
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
Visit www.construction briefing.com for your daily
EQUIPMENT SALES
WHAT HAPPENED? Off-Highway Research has announced its predictions
$2.6 BILLION AIRPORT EXPANSION IN SPAIN
PHOTO: ADOBE STOCK Plans have been unveiled to
ROAD CONSTRUCTION PROJECT IN THE HIMALAYAS
India’s most ambitious tunnel construction project is currently
THE PURSUIT OF CARBON NEUTRALITY
Despite unforeseen challenges, some of the country’s largest contractors have reported positive results as the country recovers from the pandemic
CHALLENGING CONSTRUCTION CONDITIONS
French construction remains in recession although growth in the medium term should come from the €100 billion ‘France Relance’ plan, writes Scott Hazelton
LOOKING UP - GLOBAL HIGH-RISE CONSTRUCTION TRENDS
Worries over financing, liquidity in some regions, and meeting sustainability seem to be lessening as the planet’s urban centres keep building into the sky, Mitchell Keller reports
A RETURN TO PARIS
Intermat’s organisers have shortened this year’s trade fair to four days, aiming to save energy and reduce emissions
BUILDING THE WORLD'S MOST COMPLICATED REACTOR
ITER is where science and construction meet the future as an international team build a reactor that harnesses the power of the sun, reports
A MARATHON NOT A SPRINT
From state-of-the-art laser scanning and drone-based mapping to advanced geospatial data analytics, CATRIN JONES looks at surveying’s development
WHY CONSTRUCTION IS'TIRED' OF SEEING TECH THAT ISN'T AVAILABLE TO USE
ANDY BROWN talks to DR BURCIN KAPLANOGLU, vice president of innovation and co-founder of Oracle Industry Labs, about how it is using its labs to understand what technology the industry can use in the here and now
WILL AMERICA'S BIGGEST-EVER CIVIL ENGINEERING GET STARTED?
Costs are ballooning for the Coastal Texas Project – commonly called the ‘Ike Dike’ – and at US$57 billion, some are concerned the coastal barrier may never get built, reports
WHY ARE MINI EXCAVATORS INCREASING IN POPULARITY?
The mini, but mighty, machines are continually growing in popularity. Catrin Jones takes a look at some of the newest developments and what is next for the well-loved compact machine
BUILDING THE UK'S 'MOST SUSTAINABILE' LIVE ENTERTAINMENT VENUE
Where is it? Manchester, UK When will it
Looking for back issues?
Browse the Archive >

Previous Article Next Article
March-April 2024
CONTENTS
Page 6
PAGE VIEW