According to the latest research by market intelligence firm Interact Analysis, warehouse automation order intake will begin to grow again in 2024 after the market suffered a tough 2023, though at a low rate. From 2025 onwards, revenues are expected to return to double digit growth, the firm added.
As a result of the pandemic and record low level interest rates in 2019/2020, there was significant increase in e-commerce orders which led to an uptick in warehouse construction and therefore, an increase in warehouse automation sales, Interact explained. However, now that e-commerce sales have slowed down and interest rates have gone up, the market has seen a decline in warehouse construction which has led to a corresponding slowdown in warehouse automation investments. Order intake for fixed automation will have contracted by around -8% in 2023, but order intake for mobile automation is expected to grow by 38% over the year, providing a buffer against the overall market decline, the firm concluded.
The slowdown is being felt most in vertical markets with high exposure to e-commerce such as general merchandise, grocery, and apparel, Interact further noted. These are often referred to as downstream verticals because they are downstream in the supply chain and closer to the consumer. On the other hand, upstream verticals like durable manufacturing have performed relatively well, driven by the trend towards near-shoring and the resulting construction of factories in the US and Europe. The durable manufacturing sector in fact is expected to have been the fastest growing vertical market for warehouse automation in 2023 with a revenue growth of 6%.
"The rise and fall of warehouse construction has led to a corresponding increase and decrease of end-to-end warehouse automation solutions," said Rueben Scriven, research manager at Interact Analysis. "Greenfield sites are well suited for large and complex end-to-end solutions, while brownfield sites are better suited to smaller point solutions that automate particular workflows, such as mobile robots. Because the share of brownfield sites has now increased, the share of point solutions (relative to end-to-end solutions) has also increased. Therefore, automation vendors that can provide solutions for brownfield sites and distribution center automation projects will fare well in the short term.
“Overall, our projections for 2024 are more pessimistic compared with our previous forecast release," Scriven continued. "We expect interest rates to remain high next year which will dampen warehouse construction, although we expect a return to double digit order intake growth in 2025."
The 5th edition of the Warehouse Automation report is based on research involving more than 100 in-depth research interviews and analyzed more than 120 companies, looking specifically at their past, present, and future investments in warehouse automation.