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2012 Market Planning Guide By Jim Lucy, Chief Editor Kristin LeTourneau, PhD, Associate Director of Market Research; and Doug C Dec 20, 2011 1:57 PM
When baseball philosopher Yogi Berra said, When you come to a fork in the road, take it, he wasn't referring to the current state of the U.S. economy and the trickle-down effect it has on the electrical market. Another quote by Yogi, You can learn a lot by watching, also applies here, because you can learn from the forecast data EW presents in this issue. In addition to the 2012 Market Planning Guide, be sure to check out Herm Isenstein's 2012 sales forecast on page 20 and theEW/KeyBanc quarterly survey on page 12. When it comes to finding out what may make the market tick next year, these three information sources are a triple play that even Yogi could appreciate if he was in the electrical business. Let's get right to the numbers. Despite it all, distributors are looking for respectable growth in 2012
Electrical Wholesaling's 2012 national sales forecast calls for a 5.1% increase. We hope our respondents are correct, but this forecast strikes EW's editors as a few points high. That being said, around this time last year we were worried that the 2011 national sales forecast of 5% was high, too. As it turns out, they were a wee bit conservative. ![]() According to this year's Market Planning Guide survey data and a survey we did of Top 200 distributors back in the second quarter, the industry topped this forecast with estimated growth number of more than eight percent. This sales increase for 2011 is also within shouting distance of DISC Corp.'s 2011 sales forecast of 9.4%. This all being said, it's interesting to note that of the 236 electrical distributors who provided a 2012 sales forecast on the survey, 41 percent said they expected their sales to stay the same the single largest group of responses.
Distributor optimism is being fueled by a willingness to invest in their businesses
The old rules of recovery may not apply this time In past recessions, you could count on the residential market recovering first, followed by the commercial market and then the industrial market. This time around, it's seems the order of recovery has been decoupled from the past. The industrial MRO market never fell as far as other segments of the nonresidential construction market and has provided much of what little growth there has been over the past few years in the electrical construction market. The commercial construction market is saddled with challenges like tight lending practices, lack of demand and astronomical office vacancy rates, but it will still probably recover before the residential market in many regions of the United States.
Retrofit of existing commercial facilities is gaining a larger share of the overall construction spend
Get to know your homebuilders again, particularly those that work on apartment and condo projects
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