Skip to main content

Hitachi's Morocco deal

European Hitachi Construction Machinery dealer Moviter is expanding into Africa. The Portuguese company is venturing into Angola and other countries on the continent with historical and linguistic links to its native land.
April 26, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
European 233 Hitachi Construction Machinery dealer Moviter is expanding into Africa. The Portuguese company is venturing into Angola and other countries on the continent with historical and linguistic links to its native land. Leiria-based Moviter, part of the Movicortes Group, linked up with Hitachi in 1993, cashing in on a huge and prolonged investment in Portugal’s infrastructure which saw building companies keen to use high performance construction machinery. Now that domestic demand for construction machinery has waned, Moviter is looking to new underdeveloped markets to for its Hitachi fleet. The company already has customers with machines in more than 14 African countries, all requiring the Hitachi Support Chain after-sales programme. As Hitachi’s preferred dealer for the Angolan market, Moviter hopes to use its status in the country to build a more significant commercial presence across the entire African continent. Movicortes Manager and Board Member, Arnaldo Sapinho, said Angola was an obvious choice for its ambitious expansion plans. He said: “It is a Portuguese-speaking country and it was a colony until 1975. This means that the language and similar culture are two of the main advantages that Moviter - and other Portuguese companies - have in trading with this huge African country.” In 2009, Angola suffered a financial crisis when the price of oil bottomed out. With 95% of the country's revenue coming from the natural resource, it had a major negative impact on an already stagnating construction industry. However Sapinho believes the signs for recovery are encouraging, as projects recommence and existing and potential Moviter customers are looking to subcontractors to complete the work on their behalf. Sapinho added: “The big issue is trust, so we need to continue to build relations and then develop the network.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cummins posts strong results
    May 5, 2022
    Cummins has posted record quarterly revenues amid healthy off-highway engine demand
  • Boom in Asian infrastructure investment
    April 5, 2012
    Investment in China and India continues unabated, but other nations on the continent are eager to attract companies as Patrick Smith reports Asia is still booming despite the current economic crisis, and new infrastructure programmes are constantly coming on stream. Powerhouses China and India, with their double-digit growth figures and huge infrastructure plans (in scope and cost), are leading the way and are still magnets for businesses wishing to expand, both in terms of facilities and customers. But oth
  • Hitachi’s excavator digs deep in the Swiss Jura
    May 1, 2015
    A new Hitachi ZX870LCR-5 owned by Swiss company Lachat is making a significant impact on the production process at the Asuel La Malcôte quarry in the canton of Jura. The large Zaxis-5 excavator is excavating a mixture of marlstone and limestone materials in a much cleaner way than before, as well as helping to sanitise the relatively unstable site. Lachat, founded in 1948 and taken over by the Steiner Group in June 2013, has 42 employees working in quarrying, recycling and the production of aggregates
  • VDMA reports equipment orders
    July 21, 2020
    The VDMA is reporting a drop in equipment orders.