Palfinger, the Austrian manufacturer of cranes and lifting systems, recorded a modest increase in first-quarter revenue, reporting EUR 561.50 million, which represents a 1.6% rise compared with the same period a year earlier. The company attributed the topline improvement primarily to stronger demand in Northern and Southern Europe as well as solid contributions from its Marine segment.
Profitability measures reflected the revenue gain. Net income for the quarter came in at EUR 24.60 million, up 11.8% year-over-year. Earnings before interest and taxes climbed 3% to EUR 41.30 million, producing an EBIT margin of 7.4%. On an operating cashflow proxy basis, EBITDA reached EUR 65.70 million for the quarter.
Management highlighted the Marine segment as a material driver of the positive results, citing large-scale offshore wind and cruise projects as important contributors during the period. These project-related flows helped offset softer conditions elsewhere and supported both revenue and earnings growth.
By contrast, North America posed notable challenges. The company pointed to geopolitical tensions and tariff policies as factors that weighed on demand and pressured profitability in that region. Palfinger did not provide additional numeric detail on the North American shortfall, but identified the market as a constraint on performance in the quarter.
Looking ahead, Palfinger set out near-term guidance and longer-term targets. For the first half of 2026, the company expects to perform slightly above the prior year. Management additionally projects that second-half revenue and EBIT will exceed the comparable prior-year figures. Over the longer horizon, Palfinger reaffirmed an ambition to surpass EUR 3 billion in revenue by 2030 while targeting an EBIT margin of 12%.
The results point to a company balancing divergent regional dynamics: robust project-driven demand in parts of Europe and the Marine business helped underpin growth, even as geopolitical and trade-related frictions in North America limited upside. The quarter’s margin profile leaves a clear gap to the company’s mid-term margin objective, underscoring the scale of improvement required to reach the 12% EBIT target by 2030.
Outlook and context
Palfinger’s guidance for H1 2026 and its statement that H2 revenue and EBIT should top last year set a pathway for annual improvement, contingent on the evolution of regional demand and policy developments. The firm’s 2030 revenue and margin targets remain ambitious relative to the current reported margins.