The American Rental Association
(ARA), through its ARA Rental Market Monitor subscription service, forecasts
equipment rental industry total revenue growth of 8.1 percent in 2015, reaching
$38.5 billion in the U.S. This total includes all three segments — construction/industrial, general tool and party and
event.
Construction/industrial rental
revenue is now forecast to increase 8.5 percent in 2015 to $26 billion, with
general tool projected to grow 8.3 percent to $9.9 billion this year and party
event to show a 4.5 percent increase to $2.7 billion.
“The equipment rental industry
continues to grow at a fast pace with strong equipment rental demand within all
markets,” says Christine Wehrman, ARA’s executive vice president and CEO.
“While the news focuses on the energy sector of the economy, our industry is
fortunate to have a balanced marketplace in which rental is in demand and
energy represents only one of those markets. Rental companies have always been
flexible in meeting customer demand by adapting quickly to changing markets.
The industry growth forecast remains more than double that of the overall
economy.”
“The number of positive offsets
in commercial construction, multifamily housing, healthcare and manufacturing
help to counteract the drop in oil prices and contribute to the strong 2015
growth projections for the equipment rental industry,” says Scott Hazelton,
managing partner, IHS Inc., the company that compiles data for the ARA Rental
Market Monitor.
Also, a decrease in oil prices
does not mean the energy sector growth stops. “Natural gas and oil extraction
growth will likely be slower in 2015 and 2016, but it is important to note that
extraction actually increases, just at a slower rate, even with lower oil
prices,” says Hazelton.
Projected revenue increases for
equipment rental due to more direct and indirect demand from the energy sector
may be lower now than previously expected, but Hazelton says the other rising
segments for the equipment rental industry will remain a positive factor for
2016 as well.
“IHS already had projected
softness in the energy markets in 2016, so the quick drop in oil prices now
presents less of a change in the overall forecast for the equipment rental
industry,” says Hazelton.
The forecast for Canada calls for
3.7 percent growth in 2015 to $4.1 billion, with growth of 6.3 percent expected
in 2016 to nearly $4.4 billion.
“We continue to monitor our
industry on a quarterly basis to ensure that our members have the best
information available in a changing economic environment,” says Wehrman.
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