European truck makers are pessimistic toward 2009 market
European truck makers gave a cautious outlook for 2009, worried that a six-year boom could peter out as the global economy slows.
"Things won't be any easier for our commercial vehicle business in 2009," Daimler Trucks chief Andreas Renschler told reporters on Tuesday at the IAA, Europe's biggest truck show.
Daimler, the world's biggest maker of trucks and buses, expects the global commercial vehicles market to stagnate or at best rise slightly next year, he said.
Its truck sales were practically flat in the first eight months of this year and new orders rose only 3 percent, but Renschler nonetheless expected a slight increase in 2008 truck sales due to rising demand for transport in emerging markets.
Demand sagged in particular in the North American market, where Daimler absorbed an 18 percent truck sales drop through August as the market contracted amid a cooling economy.
"There was no second-half recovery as economists expected, and the forecasts for the commercial vehicle market have been lowered month by month," Daimler said in a statement.
Renschler said the U.S. truck cycle had hit bottom but Japan lacked growth momentum, and the group was braced for a slowdown in Europe after two exceptionally strong years. However, emerging markets like Brazil and India seemed set for more growth.
Daimler was placing its hopes on prospects that customers would invest heavily to make their fleets more efficient at a time of high energy prices.
"What is new is the urgency to move ahead with these efforts," he said. "Zero-emission trucks and buses could be the norm by 2020."
Volkswagen was a bit more optimistic after reporting a 9.3 percent rise in commercial vehicle sales to 343,100 units in the first eight months of 2008.
While growth in its core market of western Europe was just 3.2 percent, it recorded a near 30 percent sales rise in eastern Europe. South America reported 25 percent growth.
"Despite more difficult economic conditions in some European markets, we are currently confident we can reach our target to deliver a total of more than 500,000 vehicles," VW Commercial Vehicles head Stephan Schaller said at the truck show.
He told Reuters he aimed to boost 2009 sales but added it was difficult to make a specific forecast.
General Motors' German Opel brand was counting on a broader model line-up to help buck the weak trend and boost sales to 185,000 units next year, division head Thomas Bauch said.
Its commercial vehicles sales were flat at nearly 115,000 units in the first eight months of this year. It aims to hit 177,500 in the full year.
Even if unit sales stay flat, makers of commercial vehicles and their suppliers are struggling to shore up profits.
"We will have trouble reaching last year's earnings," said Hans-Georg Haerter, chief executive of ZF Friedrichshafen, which specialises in drivetrains and chassis. "Rising prices for commodities and oil are making life difficult."
These factors will cost ZF hundreds of millions of euros this year, he said.
Truck sales are often seen as a leading economic indicator because booming economies produce more goods which need to be transported. But as demand slows, sales seem set to ease once full order books are cleared.
"The next two years are going to be difficult," said market research group CAR, based in Gelsenkirchen, Germany.
Views:0
Submit Your Requirements, We Are Always At Your Service.
- Linglong European Dealers Conference Successfully Held in Cyprus 2019-10-17
- Fuso eCanter Hits European Roads 2017-12-19
- China's Linglong Tyre considering European Factory 2017-06-05
- FUSO Canter Eco Hybrid takes the “European Transport Sustainability Prize 2014” 2013-12-18
- European Commercial Vehicle Registrations Down 32.4% in 2009 2010-01-27
- Great Wall Motor to enter European market in 2010 2010-01-05
- European Truck Sales Plunge 35% as Recession Deepens 2009-02-26
- Scania says to cut European output for one month 2008-12-05
- Windrose Marks 4th Anniversary with Expansion Across Five Continents 2026-03-23
- Windrose Starts Delivery of Electric Heavy Trucks in Northern Europe 2026-03-19
- Foton, COSCO Shipping Move to Secure Capacity as China’s CV Exports Rise
- The 11th DISCOVERY TRUST Awards Successfully Held in Beijing, China
- Chinese Heavy Truck Makers Shift to Value-Driven Global Expansion
- Shandong Heavy Industry and Kazakhstan’s Karaganda Region Ink New Deal
- China’s Diesel Trucks are Shifting to Electric
- Indonesia’s State-led Firm Set to Purchase 320,000 Vehicles
- SANY Truck and Pony.ai to Mass-Produce Gen-4 Autonomous Trucks in 2026
- FOTON Boosts Local Manufacturing in South Africa
- Office Closure for National Day Holiday
- FORLAND Rolls Out Its 6.8 Millionth Vehicle
- China Heavy Truck Sales Fall to 73,600 Units in February
- China’s Medium-Duty Truck Sales Fall to 8,125 Units in February, 2026
- China’s February Light Truck Sales Fall 23% to 117,200 Units
- China’s Mini Truck Sales Rise 15% in February to 41,500 Units
- China’s Light Truck Market Rises 8% in January 2026 to 323,500 units
- China’s Pickup Sales Reach Five-Year January High as Market Momentum Builds
- Heavy Truck Sales Soar 46% to 105,400 Units in January 2026
- January Medium Truck Sales Hit 14,100, Up 33%
- China’s Truck Exports Top 1 Million Units for the First Time in 2025
- China Tractor Truck Sales Up 54% in Dec., 2025 Full-Year Sales 460,000 Units

