No sign yet of a turnaround in orders for the machine tool industry

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Orders received by the German machine tool industry in the third quarter of 2023 were 9% down in nominal terms on the same period last year.

Orders from Germany declined by 8% whereas those from abroad fell by 9%. Orders received fell by a total of 7% in the first three quarters 2023.

Domestic orders were 12% and foreign orders 5% lower than in the same period last year. This represents a 12% drop in orders in real terms.

"There is still no sign of a turnaround in incoming orders in the German ma[1]chine tool industry," explained Dr. Wilfried Schäfer, executive director of the VDW (German Machine Tool Builders' Association), Frankfurt am Main, Germany, commenting on the results.

Low investment levels are affecting the entire global economy. High interest rates and costs are slowing down investment in Germany and Europe as a whole.

Consumer demand is concentrated mainly on services. Inventory levels, which many companies built up during the period of pronounced supply bottlenecks, are now declining again.

However, the pressure on costs is receding now that the rate of inflation has started to drop, and prices for energy, raw materials and intermediate goods are also falling.

Foreign orders received from Europe and Asia are currently down. The Chinese economy in particular is weak at present. The country is contending with low consumer demand and a struggling real estate sector. The US economy, by contrast, is more resilient, with the country ordering even more than China at present.

"The large backlog of orders is once again carrying us through these difficult times," said Schäfer. At the double-digit rate of 14% in nominal terms, turnover is continuing to increase, although the growth is gradually levelling off.

Capacity utilisation fell again slightly in October this year, from 90.5% in July to 88.5%. There were 65,000 employees in the sector at the end of the first half of the year.

"Under these circumstances, we can reconfirm our production forecast of 10% growth in the current year," concluded Schäfer. However, developments in the coming year are characterised by great uncertainty.