The 16.4% drop of export to Asia, certainly due to the increasing penetration of “made in China” technology for wood and furniture, which is becoming more and more attractive for China’s neighbor markets.

Machinery

Italy's export of wood and furniture equipment down 6.1% in 1Q

Italy"s export of wood and furniture equipment down 6.1% in 1Q

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In the Q1 2024, Italy's export of wood and furniture equipment totaled 379.4 million Euro, 6.1% less than in the same quarter in 2023, according to the Acimall, the association of Italian woodworking and furniture technology manufacturers.

The substantial stability of European Union (the biggest trade partner with a 52.8% share on total Italian export) is combined with an expansive trend in Italian technology purchases from North America (up by 4%), especially due to the policy adopted by the United States to reshore productions that had been outsourced to neighbor countries. The markets that still represent attractive destinations, although with significantly smaller values, include South America (plus 28%), Oceania (plus 18%) and Africa (plus 9.3%).

It is worth noticing the 16.4% drop of export to Asia, certainly due to the increasing penetration of “made in China” technology for wood and furniture, which is becoming more and more attractive for China’s neighbor markets.

Focusing on specific countries, the United States and France, the best customers in the quarter, strongly recovering compared to the entire 2023, when the purchases of Italian technology had dropped by 16% in the US and 4.6% in France. Excellent results in Sweden (plus 137% compared to the same quarter in 2023), driven by spare parts and integrations to existing technology. The United Kingdom is continuing to record a collapse of Italian machinery import (down by 36.6%), following a similar reduction in 2023.

China, despite increasing volume of domestic production, is maintaining a strong interest for Italian technology (plus 12.9% in the January-March 2024 period, repeating the plus 10% result achieved across twelve months in 2023). India keeps losing positions in the ranking of customers (minus 30.5%), while remaining in the list of markets that feed good expectations despite the results currently offered to Italian companies.

Import

Looking at the import of foreign technology into our market in the Q1 2024, it is seen further evidence of the stagnation that has characterized Italy, although the figures are really limited: import from Germany decreased by 35.6%, from China by 20.5% and from Switzerland by 12.3%; Austria recorded an 8.7% growth of sales to Italy. More generally, import in the January-March 2024 period amounted to Euro 39.4 million, just above 10% of export and dropping by 23.9% compared to the same period in 2023.

The European Union remains the most “interesting” origin, with Euro 23.3 million in the period under scrutiny despite a 24.6% reduction from the same period in 2023, and a 59.2 share on total Italian import.

“The evidence we should probably focus on is the marginal role of Africa for Italian manufacturers”, said Acimall’s director Dario Corbetta. “Despite geographical proximity and the commitment of our government to develop more profitable relations, the penetration of our industry in Africa is still limited, especially if you consider that China, instead, supposedly sold woodworking technology for approximately 100 million Euros in 2023. North America remains a highly relevant partner for our companies, and the same goes for Europe, although maybe we should consider the latter an expansion of the domestic market rather than an export destination”.