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IHS Forecasts $61.3 Billion in North America Revenue in 2019

May 8, 2019
The new five-year forecast from the American Rental Association updated on May 2 calls for equipment and event rental revenues in North America to surpass $61.3 billion in 2019, including $55.8 billion in the United States and $5.3 billion in Canada, up 5 percent compared to 2018.

The new five-year forecast from the American Rental Association updated on May 2 calls for equipment and event rental revenues in North America to surpass $61.3 billion in 2019, including $55.8 billion in the United States and $5.3 billion in Canada, up 5 percent compared to 2018. The forecast expects similar steady growth in each of the successive years of the forecast to reach $69.8 billion in revenue by 2022.

The current figures, which are updated quarterly, project slightly less growth that what was forecast in February, but continues to forecast similar steady growth, outpacing the overall economy.

“The equipment and event rental industry is growing and continues to expand faster than the overall economy,” said John McClelland Ph.D., ARA vice president for government affairs and chief economist. “The outlook continues to be positive.”

The forecast calls for equipment and event rental revenue in the U.S. to grow another 4.2 percent in 2020, 4.3 percent in 2021 and 4.7 percent in 2022 to reach $63.5 billion.

“The outlook for the equipment rental industry calls for expected growth, although at reduced rates,” said Scott Hazelton, managing director, IHS Markit, the forecasting firm that compiles data and analysis for the ARA Rentalytics subscription serve as part of a partnership with ARA. “The maturing economy, combined with trade issues, offers more limited opportunities to the construction and manufacturing sectors, while the stimulus from tax cuts to both consumers and business is fading. Even so, we expect moderate growth of more than 5 percent in 2019, and 4 percent in 2020 and 2021. In the United States, not one state has a decline in construction, general tool or party and event rental revenue and there are no signs of recession. However, weakness in core markets suggests that any forecast risk is on the downside and our forecast has evolved lower over the past six months.”

Hazelton noted that there would be potential upside from an infrastructure bill. “The exact gain to rental would depend upon the size, time span and composition – such as transportation vs. technology infrastructure – of the bill, but something on the scale proposed by the President and Congressional leaders last week has the potential to boost equipment rental revenue by up to 10 percent from its baseline.”

In Canada, rental revenue is forecast to grow 2.5 percent in 2019 to total nearly C$5.6 billion and then continues to expand with revenue increases of 4.4 percent in 2020, 5.6 percent in 2021 and 3.7 percent in 2022 to total more than C$6.3 billion.

About the Author

Michael Roth | Editor

Michael Roth has covered the equipment rental industry full time for RER since 1989 and has served as the magazine’s editor in chief since 1994. He has nearly 30 years experience as a professional journalist. Roth has visited hundreds of rental centers and industry manufacturers, written hundreds of feature stories for RER and thousands of news stories for the magazine and its electronic newsletter RER Reports. Roth has interviewed leading executives for most of the industry’s largest rental companies and manufacturers as well as hundreds of smaller independent companies. He has visited with and reported on rental companies and manufacturers in Europe, Central America and Asia as well as Mexico, Canada and the United States. Roth was co-founder of RER Reports, the industry’s first weekly newsletter, which began as a fax newsletter in 1996, and later became an online newsletter. Roth has spoken at conventions sponsored by the American Rental Association, Associated Equipment Distributors, California Rental Association and other industry events and has spoken before industry groups in several countries. He lives and works in Los Angeles when he’s not traveling to cover industry events.