Credit Markets Key To Machine Tools Recovery
Hit hard by the recession, the machine tools industry is starting to recover, but needs credit markets to improve for growth to accelerate.
June/July 10
However, the sector remains burdened by tight credit, which hampers business and financing of customer sales. The drop in capacity utilization among manufacturers, or the amount of production of a plant operating at peak hours, presents another obstacle. But business is positive for 2010. Machine tool consumption rose 49.5 percent to $258 million in March 2010, compared to more than $172 million in March 2009, according to the American Machine Tool Distributors' Association (AMTDA) and the Association For Manufacturing Technology (AMT). And with a year-to-date total of more than $548 million in March, this year was already up by 33.7 percent from the same period in 2009.
"The March increase in manufacturing technology orders is further proof that the recovery is accelerating," says Peter Borden, AMTDA president and CEO. "The number is encouraging, considering that bank lending is still anemic and that Congress has done little to help manufacturing, such as re-passing the bonus depreciation tax bill or R&D credits. We still expect some ebb and flow for the rest of the year because of uncertainties in the world economy."
Depression, Not Recession
Last year was "a depression, not a recession" for the industry, Borden says. Customer orders were down 70 percent compared to 2008. Financing for new capital projects and production orders dried up. Capacity utilization among manufacturers shrank from upwards of 80 percent to between 50 percent and 60 percent.
"The credit crunch prevented toolmakers from getting the loans that they needed, not only for projects but for individual credit as well," Borden says.
However, Pat McGibbon, AMT vice president of strategic information and research, placed customer order declines at 63 percent last year compared to 2008. "Customers stopped buying as consumer spending went into the tank," he says. "Manufacturers began to basically stop production and work their inventories."
In the auto industry, capacity utilization dropped precipitously to less than 37 percent in 2009 from 70 percent as demand for new vehicles nosedived.
Borden and McGibbon both say that the machine tool industry is on a slow road to recovery. The market began to stabilize during the fourth quarter of 2009, Borden says, as accelerated depreciation contributed to a slight comeback.
"Almost all the manufacturing industries are in recovery now based on industrial production, capacity utilization, shipments and orders, and the Purchasing Managers Index [PMI]," McGibbon says. And an April 2010 Manufacturing ISM Report on Business reported that manufacturing grew for the ninth consecutive month.
The rate of industry growth as indicated by the PMI grew by its fastest rate since June 2004, when the index reached 60.5 percent. New orders continue to grow, and the New Orders Index has averaged 61.6 percent for the past 10 months. Overall, the sector's recovery remains strong, and the report relayed optimism for continued growth.
Vigorous results from big manufacturers such as Caterpillar and Whirlpool show that demand is spreading across consumer and industrial suppliers, according to an April Wall Street Journal article. These results highlight growing optimism among manufacturers, who report that inventory reductions are declining and customer orders are rallying.
The Federal Reserve reported in April that manufacturing output surged in March as factories continued to lead the economic recovery, according to the Journal. Factory output rose by 0.9 percent in March, which reinforced expectations that the manufacturing sector would boost the economy as firms call employees back to work to boost output and restock store shelves.
Despite the good news, manufacturers still can't celebrate the recovery because many are stalled on credit renewal, McGibbon says. And domestic manufacturers' shift to low cost, foreign labor markets continues to hurt the industry. But high tech applications may alleviate those woes, as advanced machine tools provide increased productivity and better engineering and automation. "The result is production of higher quality parts for less money than foreign manufacturers can produce," Borden says.
But manufacturers may be in for painful surprises if their overseas production moves don't net larger returns, and may even cost more. "Workers here are more productive and our superior technology tends to provide higher quality products at lower cost," McGibbon says.
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