New technical requirements for tractors resulted in peak in sales in December 2017
20 February 2018
In total, 161.235 agricultural tractors were registered in 30 European countries[1] in 2017. This means that the European tractor market grew with 12,8% in comparison with 2016[2].
The increase in tractor registrations is mostly due to a peak in registrations in December. Up to December, registrations were only up marginally with higher sales solely the result of more tractors below 50 hp being sold while demand for tractors above 50 hp remained stable. A peak in December led to a final growth of 38.41% for tractors below 50 hp and an increase of 6.45% for tractors above 50 hp.
December peak in tractor registrations caused by EU legislation
The main reason for this December peak is new technical requirements for tractors that became mandatory on all new tractors on 1 January 2018. These technical requirements resulted in mandatory changes on various aspects such as braking and lighting. Tractors not meeting those requirements needed to be registered or placed on the market before that date. Therefore, many tractors were registered by the end of 2017 and it can be expected that registrations will be negatively impacted the first months of 2018 as a consequence.
Comparing the registrations in different power bands shows that sales increased for most power ranges. Only for tractors between 100 and 150 hp total registrations decreased slightly. The number of registrations for the largest tractors above 300 hp remained stable.
Most markets experienced growth in 2017
Almost all tractor markets in countries of CEMA members experienced significant growth rates in 2017, varying between 5.7% in Spain and 22.9% in Denmark. The French market was the only exception with a decrease of 2.2% in tractor registrations. Without taking into account the peak in December, figures were still mostly positive. Until the third quarter, all CEMA markets - except the French, German and Austrian market - grew in comparison with the year before.
The general agricultural machinery market - including combine harvesters, sprayers, balers and mowers - also experienced a positive year.
The French market experienced a sharp decline in the first semester of 2017. However, this was followed by strong growth in the second semester resulting in a total increase of the agricultural machinery market turnover of 2.1%.
The agricultural machinery market in Germany grew with approximately 9% in 2017. This is mainly due to a rise in tractors sales. For other agricultural machinery, demand only increased marginally.
In Italy the agricultural machinery market experienced in 2017 a substantial increases in demand for many type of products. Sales were partly encouraged by EU and national funding.
Demand on the UK market in 2017 was higher for most agricultural product groups. Only sprayers and grain drills experienced declines. Consequently, there was an overall growth of the UK agricultural machinery market.
The total Dutch market for agricultural machinery was also bigger in 2017 than in 2016.
In Belgium the general agricultural machinery market declined in 2017. From the main machine types, demand for balers and combine harvesters declined, while demand for sprayers, forage harvesters and mowers was relatively stable.
Positive signals for the agricultural machinery market in 2018
In 2018, the market may grow further, an expectation based on the CEMA Barometer and the economic experts of the CEMA member associations. Economic experts from France, Germany, Belgium, Italy and the UK all expect a small growth of the agricultural machinery market for 2018 in their country.
This positive trend is confirmed by the latest CEMA Barometer index. The CEMA Barometer index is going up for several months already and is currently at its highest point since 2009..
As a monthly survey sent to the European agricultural machinery industry and covering all major product categories, the CEMA Barometer provides a regular overview of the business mood based on current business sentiment and the expected turnover in the next 6 months. Below you can find the latest CEMA Barometer.
[1] This includes EU28 countries excluding Bulgaria, Cyprus, Malta and Romania, but with Bosnia Herzegovina, Iceland, Moldova, Norway, Serbia & Montenegro and Switzerland
[2] This increase was for the 30 European countries. Tractor registrations are relatively high in 2016 when all countries in the CEMA network (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Spain, Turkey and the UK) are considered. When Turkey is not included this level of tractor registrations was low in the EU countries.