Berliner Boersenzeitung - German industry seeks ladder out of supply chain woes

EUR -
AED 4.245394
AFN 80.329445
ALL 97.449679
AMD 443.65358
ANG 2.068586
AOA 1059.894889
ARS 1492.707957
AUD 1.777528
AWG 2.083382
AZN 1.966864
BAM 1.954809
BBD 2.335766
BDT 142.125321
BGN 1.955744
BHD 0.435713
BIF 3401.026826
BMD 1.155829
BND 1.489361
BOB 7.994569
BRL 6.44352
BSD 1.156839
BTN 100.365457
BWP 15.660144
BYN 3.785543
BYR 22654.248355
BZD 2.323903
CAD 1.592051
CDF 3340.345734
CHF 0.929611
CLF 0.028306
CLP 1110.450976
CNY 8.295267
CNH 8.303447
COP 4781.086649
CRC 584.616246
CUC 1.155829
CUP 30.629468
CVE 110.901646
CZK 24.568337
DJF 205.41379
DKK 7.46194
DOP 70.505639
DZD 150.554847
EGP 56.32343
ERN 17.337435
ETB 159.742762
FJD 2.608016
FKP 0.866547
GBP 0.864254
GEL 3.119761
GGP 0.866547
GHS 12.134042
GIP 0.866547
GMD 83.219921
GNF 10004.856068
GTQ 8.87696
GYD 242.033572
HKD 9.073199
HNL 30.456018
HRK 7.535202
HTG 151.715706
HUF 398.938429
IDR 18967.673976
ILS 3.888567
IMP 0.866547
INR 101.059678
IQD 1514.135987
IRR 48674.849531
ISK 142.213338
JEP 0.866547
JMD 185.336035
JOD 0.819498
JPY 170.956935
KES 149.33295
KGS 100.922822
KHR 4646.4327
KMF 492.960546
KPW 1040.149652
KRW 1596.980023
KWD 0.352993
KYD 0.964065
KZT 628.378597
LAK 24937.010767
LBP 103490.94708
LKR 349.510359
LRD 232.322178
LSL 20.677382
LTL 3.412863
LVL 0.699149
LYD 6.253154
MAD 10.505907
MDL 19.742101
MGA 5120.322168
MKD 61.613253
MMK 2425.972694
MNT 4149.985937
MOP 9.354383
MRU 46.025141
MUR 52.913954
MVR 17.803917
MWK 2007.093144
MXN 21.621064
MYR 4.897828
MZN 73.926719
NAD 20.677801
NGN 1769.909217
NIO 42.476783
NOK 11.774187
NPR 160.588697
NZD 1.939492
OMR 0.444436
PAB 1.156904
PEN 4.106079
PGK 4.79897
PHP 66.566527
PKR 327.156879
PLN 4.271891
PYG 8665.056649
QAR 4.208084
RON 5.075621
RSD 117.159479
RUB 94.634696
RWF 1664.393757
SAR 4.33549
SBD 9.528843
SCR 16.971793
SDG 694.072855
SEK 11.149359
SGD 1.487569
SHP 0.9083
SLE 26.583647
SLL 24237.160729
SOS 660.550277
SRD 42.41635
STD 23923.326643
STN 24.792532
SVC 10.122306
SYP 15028.030086
SZL 20.677202
THB 37.529681
TJS 11.019671
TMT 4.05696
TND 3.346109
TOP 2.707061
TRY 46.884704
TTD 7.852189
TWD 34.337333
TZS 2964.701315
UAH 48.363572
UGX 4147.076841
USD 1.155829
UYU 46.288935
UZS 14563.444904
VES 141.805481
VND 30293.700116
VUV 138.093696
WST 3.186753
XAF 655.675629
XAG 0.030329
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.123686
XCG 2.084933
XDR 0.801463
XOF 646.108442
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.15007
ZAR 20.627918
ZMK 10403.831161
ZMW 26.580593
ZWL 372.176466
  • RBGPF

    -3.5200

    74.03

    -4.75%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.2200

    23.12

    +0.95%

  • RELX

    0.1500

    51.92

    +0.29%

  • CMSC

    0.1100

    22.61

    +0.49%

  • RYCEF

    0.3500

    13.5

    +2.59%

  • SCS

    -0.3400

    10.51

    -3.24%

  • NGG

    0.2000

    70.52

    +0.28%

  • RIO

    0.0800

    62.27

    +0.13%

  • GSK

    0.2200

    37.67

    +0.58%

  • BCC

    -0.6000

    86.14

    -0.7%

  • BCE

    -0.1700

    23.66

    -0.72%

  • BTI

    0.9900

    52.77

    +1.88%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.06

    +0.23%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    11.11

    -0.45%

  • BP

    0.2900

    32.96

    +0.88%

  • AZN

    2.1500

    73.98

    +2.91%

German industry seeks ladder out of supply chain woes
German industry seeks ladder out of supply chain woes

German industry seeks ladder out of supply chain woes

A new warehouse with a freshly unboxed smell is the consequence of the coronavirus pandemic for the German ladder, stool and scaffold-maker Munk.

Text size:

In the southern town of Guenzburg on the banks of the Danube, the group has invested 10 million euros ($11.3 million) into the complex to stockpile enough raw materials and components to keep production running amid serious disruption to supply.

"I have not experienced anything like it in my 40 years," CEO Ferdinand Munk said of the shortages that hampered the country's comeback from the economic impact of the pandemic over the past year.

On Friday, the federal statistics agency Destatis will publish German growth figures for the fourth quarter, with early signs indicating Europe's largest economy shrank by "between 0.5 and one percent," curtailed by supply chain woes.

The last three months of the year were marked by the same bottlenecks and coronavirus restrictions which saw Germany limp to 2.7 percent growth in 2021, according to Destatis.

At Munk, the company has had difficulties sourcing rubber feet for ladders and aluminium, the production of which was troubled by a short supply of magnesium from China.

If the company were not holding double its normal stock of aluminium, "then we would no longer be able to produce because delivery times are now extremely long", Munk told AFP.

- Chained together -

After a crisis meeting with the company's biggest suppliers near the start of the pandemic, the Bavarian company now has "much shorter supply chains", said Munk, who sees an advantage in having suppliers that are closer to home.

The newly minted hangar is part of the company's plan to "come out of the pandemic strong and less dependent" on others, Munk said, as is his intention never to rely on just one supplier.

The ladder-maker will not be the only manufacturer making changes to their supply chains to manage deliveries and avoid disruption, said Fritzi Koehler-Geib, chief economist at the public lender KfW.

While pre-pandemic globalisation had fueled the trend of sourcing further afield in order to cut costs, the health emergency has led businesses to relook at their model of reliance on foreign suppliers.

Businesses will reevaluate "the balance between speed and cost efficiency in their supply chains and their resistance to shocks" after the pandemic, she said.

The dependence of Germany's large manufacturing sector on supplies of raw materials and components meant bottlenecks were particularly relevant for the progress of the economy, Koehler-Geib said.

The country's flagship carmakers were hit hard by an acute shortage of semi-conductors, a key component in the computer systems integrated into conventional and electric vehicles.

New car sales in Germany fell by 10.1 percent in 2021, according to industry figures, after collapsing 19 percent in 2020.

- 'Get us again' -

Semiconductor shortages are "very clearly the biggest difficulty," Robert Schullan, CEO of Hawe Hydraulik in Munich, told AFP.

Better supply of the chips, which Hawe builds into the controls for construction machinery and other products, is still "not in sight", he said.

The hydraulics group is managing the turbulent supply situation with a reinforced buying team, but the disruptions have held some work back.

Not just the manufacturer's suppliers, but its "clients are naturally also affected by bottlenecks", Schullan said, adding that Hawe was "well occupied" but could always do more.

Alarmed by how one of its pillars of industry has been crippled by the supply issue, the German government has pledged to plough billions of euros into bringing semiconductor production back to Europe.

But its impact will not be immediate.

Supply troubles look set to dampen Germany's economic recovery in the new year, with the government revising down its estimate for growth in 2022 on Wednesday to 3.6 percent from the 4.1 percent figure it forecast in October last year.

The revival is expected to pick up pace as the year goes on, but the start of the year would "still be subdued due to the coronavirus pandemic", the economy ministry said in a report.

Severe supply troubles will continue "into the fourth quarter" when the pandemic will have ebbed, Munk believes.

But he warned against complacency in the face of new risks, adding that bottlenecks could "get us again."

(Y.Berger--BBZ)