Business Day

US industry pares robot orders amid caution about economy

• For many manufactur­ers, the sale of existing machines has been hampered by worries about excess stock

- Timothy Aeppel

North American companies ordered about a third fewer robots in 2023 as worries about a slowing economy and higher interest rates made it harder to justify buying the advanced machines, the first hiccup in five years in what has been a steady progressio­n of the robot invasion of the region’s workforce.

“When the economy isn’t great, it’s easier to delay purchases,” said Jeff Burnstein, president of the Associatio­n for Advancing Automation, which tracks robot orders.

Companies bought 31,159 robots in 2023, a decrease of 30% on the year before, the largest drop in percentage terms since 2006 and largest drop yet in net units, according to the group. The pullback occurred in automotive-related industries — which made up about half of the market in 2023 — as well as other sectors such as food and metals manufactur­ing.

Orders in the fourth quarter hit 7,683, an 8% drop from the same period a year earlier.

Slowing robot orders came even as some companies announced initiative­s to develop more advanced versions of the machines. Robotics start-up Figure said in January that it forged a partnershi­p with Germany’s BMW to deploy humanoid robots in the carmaker’s South Carolina factory to take on certain physical tasks.

Electric vehicle maker Tesla also has a humanoid robot in developmen­t.

But for many robot makers, selling existing machines has been hampered by worries about a softening economy and the excess inventorie­s built up during the Covid-19 pandemic. Universal Robots, a Danish maker of small, flexible robots, recently reported its revenue fell 7% in 2023 to $304m.

Universal’s president, Kim Povlsen, told investors: “2023 was characteri­sed by a difficult economic and business environmen­t for many of our core customers, with global industrial activity slowing in the first half.”

Robot sales boomed during the Covid-19 pandemic as producers scrambled to use the machines to churn out goods amid a dire labour shortage. Indeed, 2022 marked a record year for orders, according to data from the associatio­n.

To be sure, robots are just one type of equipment companies need, and other gauges of spending have held up better in the US. Orders for non-defence capital goods excluding aircraft

— a measure closely watched by economists to track trends in business spending — rose 1.7% in 2023, according to the commerce department, suggesting that investment­s in more basic types of equipment remained close to steady as the economy defied expectatio­ns of a sharper slowdown.

Dave Fox, president of CIM Systems, an Indiana company known as an integrator that assembles robotic systems for customers, said his business started off strongly in 2023 but then slumped.

“Several big projects got pushed into this year,” said Fox. “There were definitely a few customers who brought up their concern about where the economy is headed. And interest rates probably didn’t help.”

He estimated his business volume fell 30% in 2023 from the year before. Some customers who delayed orders were now asking for updated quotes, which is a good sign for business in the months ahead. But he said it was too early to say whether business will return to lofty pandemic levels.

THERE’S STILL THIS FEELING THAT COMPANIES WERE BUYING IN ADVANCE OF THEIR NEEDS IN 2022

Jeff Burnstein, President of an industry associatio­n

Burnstein said most robot producers he spoke to were optimistic that business will pick up in the second half. He said the industry had largely worked its way through the distortion­s caused by the pandemic.

During the crisis, many companies put in extra orders for robots because they worried about receiving deliveries amid production delays and a breakdown in global supply chains.

“There’s still this feeling that companies were buying in advance of their needs [in 2022]” said Burnstein, “so a lot of companies now have inventory to work through before they order a lot of new robots again.”

Joe Gemma, chief revenue officer of Wauseon Machine in Ohio, agreed there was an inventory glut that distorted the business. “A lot of us were ordering extra inventory,” he said. “Our customers were too.”

The shortage of US labour meant the robot business would continue to thrive. “I was at a plant recently that normally has 600 people working in production — and they have 140 open positions,” he said. “Almost every place we go, there’s still a workforce challenge.”

 ?? /Reuters/File ?? Softer economy: A researcher at Procter & Gamble’s CoRE Fabric and Home Care Robotics Laboratory works on a robot for handling sheets, in Cincinnati, Ohio, US.
/Reuters/File Softer economy: A researcher at Procter & Gamble’s CoRE Fabric and Home Care Robotics Laboratory works on a robot for handling sheets, in Cincinnati, Ohio, US.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa