Skip to main content

Simex grows attachment business outside Italy

Despite the downturn in its home country of Italy, attachment manufacturer Simex has seen a year-on-year rise in revenue of around 8.5%, from €19.5m in 2012 to €21.3m in 2013. “All our growth came from outside the domestic market and mainly outside Europe,” said Federico Tamburri, assistant general manager at Simex. “Sales in Central and South America and Asia led to this increase.”
January 6, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
Simex’s biggest crusher bucket only sells to the UK market
Despite the downturn in its home country of Italy, attachment manufacturer 1141 SIMEX has seen a year-on-year rise in revenue of around 8.5%, from €19.5m in 2012 to €21.3M in 2013.

“All our growth came from outside the domestic market and mainly outside Europe,” said Federico Tamburri, assistant general manager at SIMEX. “Sales in Central and South America and Asia led to this increase.”

SIMEX sells a limited range of attachments in the US and Canada, as it has contracts with major OEMs in the market which prevent it from selling its highest value attachments there. But at Conexpo, its stand was attracting visitors from outside North America too.

“We are seeing a lot of visitors from Asian countries and Oceania, which is important for us,” said Tamburri. “Asia is becoming a rising star for us. Two years ago Asia accounted for 2% of our turnover. Last year that grew to 5 or 6%.”

Crusher buckets are the most important product in the North American market, said Tamburri. The US is the only market to which SIMEX sells its biggest crusher bucket, the CBE50 which can be fitted onto excavators up to 60tonnes.

Also on the stand was SIMEX’s new VSE40, the prototype of which was unveiled at Bauma last year, a screening bucket with a patented mechanism which allows the operator to change the size of the screened material from the cab at the touch of a button. Standard products take several hours to change settings.

“We are delivering the first units to Italian customers because we want to keep the youngest units close to home,” said Tamburri, who added that he had a number of orders waiting on his desk for the attachment to go through this final test phase.

At the same time, SIMEX is working on smaller versions of the VSE40. “Within a year we could be presenting at least three models of the screener,” said Tamburri.
www.simex.it

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • DenimoTech focuses on today's challenges
    November 27, 2012
    Empty environmental commitments from governments, falling bitumen quality and the impact of the economic crisis - DenimoTech asked some of its global distributors about the challenges of today’s markets - Kristina Smith was there to listen in Competition from Chinese manufacturers; highways abandoned half-built; the worst year for road building in the last 20 years. These are challenging times for DenimoTech’s distributors whose goal is to sell the firm’s bitumen emulsion and polymer modified bitumen plants
  • World asphalt demand to grow 3.6% a year until 2017
    January 6, 2017
    World demand for asphalt will grow by 3.6% annually until 2017, according to Cleveland market research company The Freedonia Group. This follows a decline in demand between 2007 and 2012 in North America and Western Europe, during the global economic crisis. “Gains will be driven by especially strong growth in consumption in China and other developing countries as they work to improve their transportation infrastructures,” said Freedonia analyst Mariel Behnke.
  • World asphalt demand to grow 3.6% a year until 2017
    March 4, 2014
    World demand for asphalt will grow by 3.6% annually until 2017, according to Cleveland market research company The Freedonia Group. This follows a decline in demand between 2007 and 2012 in North America and Western Europe, during the global economic crisis. “Gains will be driven by especially strong growth in consumption in China and other developing countries as they work to improve their transportation infrastructures,” said Freedonia analyst Mariel Behnke.
  • CECE 2018 conference Rome: the sector powers up for digitisation
    March 20, 2019
    Getting the human-machine interface for equipment automation right is a lot trickier than expected. David Arminas reports from the CECE conference in Rome For many contractors, digitisation is key for improving on-site operational efficiency. But it may be time to take stock of progress and examine what does and doesn’t work. That is not to say that the anchors should be thrown out to halt development. Far from it. In the past eight months, the CECE - Committee for European Construction Equipment – led