Sustained Chinese growth

Sales of construction equipment in China will exceed 325,000 units in 2018, according to the Mid-Year Review from Off-Highway Research’s Chinese Service (OHR China). This 30% growth will follow on from the 81% in demand seen in 2017. The excavator and wheeled loader sectors are the main drivers, states OHR China, and sales growth has been particularly brisk in the first half of the year. Wheeled loaders have traditionally been the highest volume machines in China, but last year crawler excavators out-so
August 6, 2018
LiuGong 939E crawler excavator.JPG
Construction equipment sales in China will top 325,000 units in 2018, according to the Mid-Year Review from OHR’s Chinese Service. LiuGong is among leading Chinese global OEMs. Pictured is a LiuGong 939E crawler excavator at the Hillhead 2018 exhibition

Sales of construction equipment in China will exceed 325,000 units in 2018, according to the Mid-Year Review from Off-Highway Research’s Chinese Service (OHR China). This 30%  growth will follow on from the 81% in demand seen in 2017.

The excavator and wheeled loader sectors are the main drivers, states OHR China, and sales growth has been particularly brisk in the first half of the year. Wheeled loaders have traditionally been the highest volume machines in China, but last year crawler excavators out-sold them for the first time. OHR China says that the gap is expected to widen further this year, with nearly 140,000 crawler excavator sales against 83,000 wheeled loaders. The major global construction equipment industry research firm also states that 2018 is also seeing strong growth for crawler dozer, mini excavator and mobile crane sales in China.

The firm continues: “New infrastructure projects which were launched in 2016 and 2017 are the key drivers for growth, many of which fall under the auspices of the government’s ‘One Belt, One Road’ initiative. The real estate market has also been a positive influence on equipment sales.

“However, with infrastructure investment now slowing, the equipment market is expected to fall back in 2019. But equipment volumes are expected to remain reasonable – certainly above the deep lows of 2015 and 2016. The government’s focus on curbing overheating investment in the infrastructure segment should prevent a repeat of the devastating boom & bust cycle which was seen following the stimulus-driven surge in sales from 2009-2011.