Skip to main content

Senior Cat boss on booming emergent market

Paolo Fellin, vice president of Caterpillar’s Global Construction & Infrastructure Division, has touched on the importance of the new dominance of booming African and other Emergent nation construction markets. Guy Woodford reports For Paolo Fellin, the last 10 years have seen the birth of a new order in world construction equipment sales.
March 28, 2014 Read time: 4 mins
Caterpillar’s new 390F excavator in action at the Cat Malaga Demonstration Centre
Paolo Fellin, vice president of Caterpillar’s Global Construction  & Infrastructure Division, has touched on the importance of the new dominance of booming African and other Emergent nation construction markets. Guy Woodford reports

For Paolo Fellin, the last 10 years have seen the birth of a new order in world construction equipment sales.

Speaking during the 178 Caterpillar Press Day event showcasing the US construction equipment giant’s new machines range at the company’s Demonstration Centre in Malaga, Spain, the Caterpillar VP of Global Construction & Infrastructure said, “I remember about ten years’ ago in the EMEA [Europe, Middle East and Africa] Division alone, about 30% of our business came from Africa, the Middle East and Russia, and about 70% came from Europe. Right now, that thing has flipped completely.

“Obviously you can’t take a machine that is designed for Europe and just adapt it and throw it up somewhere else. Now we are building machines separately for the higher regulated countries, and for the less regulated countries. The customer often needs very high productivity and a certain type of machine. But a customer that has very low hours in one year needs less productivity and a different type of machine.” As an example of CAT’s different machine models of the same type for contrasting markets and applications, Fellin mentioned the F Series large wheeled excavators, the new M Series medium wheeled loaders and H Series small wheeled loaders.

He continued, “Segmentation is very important right now. One machine used to go everywhere. Now we have to build one machine out of one factory for the developed world, and another machine for other segments of the world.”

Fellin made his statistical illustration of the new dominance of emergent markets, such as Africa, of overall global construction equipment sales, while giving a general overview to the world’s construction equipment media of the state of key regional sales markets and Caterpillar’s focus on driving up customer profits through their use of CAT machines, equipment and services.

New 2013 trading figures showed that Caterpillar recorded US$55.656 billion sales revenues in the year – down 16% on the $65.875 billion posted in 2012. The drop was primarily said to be due to a Sharp decline in new machine sales for mining. The latest available full-year CAT EMEA ‘Construction Industries’ sales revenue figures, for the year 2012, saw the company achieve $4.633 billion annual sales revenues, compared to $4.768 billion in 2011.

The Caterpillar Press Day event saw the showcasing of a wide variety of new machine models including CAT’s 725C and 730C articulated trucks; the 772G off-highway truck; the 982M and 972M medium wheeled loaders; the 390F large excavator; and the 259D compact track loader.

Fellin’s views on the construction equipment purchasing power of the emergent markets mirrors the views of other senior figures in leading international construction equipment manufacturing companies.

In an article for World Highways prior to Bauma 2013 Mario Gasparri, head of the CNH Construction Equipment business for its Europe, Middle East, Africa (EMEA) business region said Africa and Middle East markets were growing much faster than other key regional markets such as Europe.

“In the Middle East, the oil and gas industry and road projects are the main construction drivers, and we expect Total industry volumes to continue growing, both in the light and heavy equipment,” said Gasparri.

“We expect the industry to grow in South Africa, where the government presented a package of strategic projects over the next 15 years.”

Independent market analysers share Fellin and Gasparri's focus on Africa and other emerging markets. Despite noting the “extremely tentative” mood of construction sector firms in the current economic climate, 4137 KPMG’s Global Construction Survey 2013, published in October last year, states Africa is the region that attracts most business interest.

Meanwhile, 1391 PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), the multinational professional services company, notes in its December 2013 report on South African construction that there are a number of “encouraging signs” that the national construction industry has sprung to life. These are said by PwC to stem from the financial performance of some of South Africa’s leading construction firms, their order book growth and public infrastructure commitments.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Huge potential of Kenya’s bitumen market
    May 17, 2017
    Kenya’s bitumen demand to grow - Shem Oirere writes. Kenya’s demand for bitumen products is set to increase with recent budget allocations for construction of new roads, ports and airports and for maintenance of existing transport infrastructure. The country’s economic growth rose from 5.3% in 2014 to 5.5% in 2015 and is projected to hit 6% and 6.4% in 2016 and 2017 respectively according to the African Development Bank, triggering demand for better and modern infrastructure particularly in the transport se
  • Cold road reclamation in South Africa
    July 18, 2012
    Raubex Construction’s new Cat RM500 rotary mixer is proving its worth on a road reclamation work on a South African highway Part of an extensive motorway network some 185km long, South Africa’s ongoing Gauteng Freeway Improvement Project (GIFP) is creating a modern, world-class toll route system. The new road will provide major impetus to socio-economic growth in the country’s most populous and commercially active region. Being built in stages by the South African National Roads Authority (SANRAL), these r
  • Optimism for M&T Expo 2012 show
    May 30, 2012
    M&T Expo 2012, the 8th International Exhibition of Construction Equipment and 6th International Exhibition of Mining Equipment, has opened in São Paulo, Brazil’s biggest city. It is the largest trade show for the construction and mining industries in Latin America. According to M&T Expo promoter Sobrameta (the Brazilian Association of Technology for Equipment and Maintenance) the prevailing tone at the opening ceremony was one of optimism among the leaders in the two segments of industry. Sobratema is expe
  • European construction equipment industry stages 'grand comeback' in 2021
    March 4, 2022
    Demand for construction equipment in Europe continued to grow in 2021, after the industry had already seen a return to growth in the second half of 2020 when the impact of the pandemic was receding.