Fire truck boom highlights divide in US manufacturing
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[January 19, 2024] By
Timothy Aeppel
(Reuters) - Anyone looking around Oshkosh's cavernous fire truck factory
in Appleton, Wisconsin, for evidence of the longest U.S. manufacturing
slump in two decades could be forgiven for coming away scratching their
heads.
The delivery backlog for the company’s most sought-after fire-fighting
rigs now stretches into 2026, part of a record $16 billion backlog for
all types of the company’s trucks, which range from waste haulers and
cement mixers to tow trucks and airport rescue vehicles. Oshkosh’s total
revenues in 2022 equaled about half that amount.
"There might be a downturn coming, but we don’t see it," John Pfeifer,
the company’s chief executive officer, told Reuters in an interview.
Oshkosh illustrates a sharp divide in the factory sector.
On one side are companies buoyed by a historic shift in U.S. attitudes
about how to grow and protect domestic industries, particularly those
deemed essential to national security. The Biden administration has
championed legislation, including the Inflation Reduction Act and the
CHIPS and Science Act, funneling billions of dollars into new
investments in green technology, infrastructure, and semiconductors.
A loosening of purse strings by towns and cities as they emerge from
pandemic-induced austerity also is driving demand for emergency and
other equipment.
In the four quarters since the CHIPS Act became law, business investment
in structures has on average added 0.43 percentage point to U.S. gross
domestic product growth, its strongest contribution to economic growth
in more than a decade, according to Commerce Department data. All that
work needs machines to get the job done, fueling orders for heavy
equipment makers.
MIXED BAG
But at the same time there’s a swath of U.S. manufacturing stuck in the
doldrums, which is why the economic numbers tell a mixed story.
The Institute for Supply Management’s closely watched monthly gauge of
U.S. factory activity, for instance, just notched its 14th consecutive
month of contraction. That’s the longest stretch of sour reports since
the early 2000s and the kind of number that economists normally
associate with recession, not a manufacturing resurgence.
High interest rates and inflation have dampened demand for many consumer
goods deemed non-essential, for instance, hurting those producers.
Harley-Davidson, the iconic motorcycle maker, reported a 24% yearly
decline in third-quarter profit in October as customers cut back on
luxury spending. The company’s CEO, Jochen Zeitz, had previously told
investors that tight credit was denting consumers’ ability to buy
big-ticket leisure items.
But then there are the pockets of strength. The latest report from the
Federal Reserve on industrial production showed that medium and heavy
truck production totaled 330,000 vehicles last year, just short of
2019's post-financial crisis high point of 340,000 vehicles.
Indeed, spending on all types of core capital goods - a key measure of
business investment - remains close to record highs, said Chad Moutray,
the chief economist for the National Association of Manufacturers. "If
you adjust for inflation, maybe you see a little more weakness," he
added. "But it explains why anyone in that capital goods space says
things look pretty good."
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A view of the main entry way at the Oshkosh plant in Wisconsin
October 12, 2011. REUTERS/Darren Hauck/File Photo
The problem for many producers is a hangover from the COVID-19
pandemic. During the crisis, manufacturers of everything from bikes
to recreational vehicles saw demand explode as consumers hunkered
down and shifted spending to goods that helped them weather the
shutdown. But when the crisis eased, that demand dried up.
That’s not the issue at Oshkosh. Pfeifer, the CEO, said a
combination of U.S. companies bringing factory work back from
overseas and hefty government spending on favored industries is
creating an enduring surge in demand.
"If you look at the world today, there’s a huge amount of
infrastructure spending - and it’s just starting," said Pfeifer, who
noted that many mega-projects like semiconductor factories take
years to complete.
'CONFIDENCE TO BUY'
Other fire truck producers are also sitting on thick order books.
REV Group, a Milwaukee-based manufacturer that owns four major fire
truck brands, reported a record $3.6 billion backlog in its fire and
emergency vehicle division in December, a 41% increase over the
previous year.
The company’s CEO, Mark Skonieczny, told investors last month that
he expects "demand and inbound orders" in the fire and emergency
business to begin to normalize back to historic trends in the coming
year.
But the sector is unlikely to slump. According to Mordor
Intelligence, a market research firm, the U.S. fire truck market hit
$2 billion in 2023, up slightly from 2022, and is projected to grow
to $3 billion by 2029.
"We’re having one of our strongest sales years ever," said Zach
Rudy, director of sales and marketing at Sutphen, a family-owned
fire truck manufacturer in Ohio.
Rudy said many municipalities were cautious about spending in the
early days of the pandemic, since it was unclear how the crisis
would impact their funding. "But as governments started putting
money back into their municipal budgets," he said, "that gave them
more confidence to buy."
Indeed, after a historic slump during the height of the pandemic,
state and local government investment spending has rebounded and
over the last five quarters has added to U.S. economic growth by the
most since the 1980s, Commerce Department data shows.
The industry is also benefiting from a shift toward electrification.
Oshkosh and other major producers have developed new lines of
electric fire trucks.
"We’ve got a fully electrified product now," said Oshkosh CEO
Pfeifer. "So that’ll be a long-term driver, just converting from
diesel to electric, that’ll last more than a decade."
(Reporting by Timothy Aeppel; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea Ricci)
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