While the US continuous feed press sales did see a hike in the last two years, the European placements were flat at best. They now represent roughly two thirds of the US placements, despite Europe having a larger population. Another major difference compared to the US is that MICR has almost no importance in Europe.
Moving forward a couple of trends will govern the demand for inkjet printers for transaction printing in Europe
- Some countries will have rapidly declining transaction volumes due to high postal costs and digital document policies. Other countries will remain more stable.
- An increasing volume of regulatory information will mitigate the drop in transaction print volumes. The average number of pages per envelope is increasing.
- Printers are looking into other applications to fill up capacity. This will require other papers, likely a higher print quality and additional finishing equipment.
- Lower cost devices will be preferred. Volumes are coming down, but sites still want multiple lines for backup reasons. There is less pressure to consolidate or move to faster devices as the focus of billers is still on national markets.
- For some of the reasons mentioned above, cut-sheet inkjet will gain importance in the future for transaction print, although the mainstay will remain continuous feed.
Ralf Schlözer is the EU correspondent for Inkjet Insight based in Berlin, Germany. He brings over 30 years of experience in the Graphic Arts and Graphic System Manufacturing industries with a focus on digital and inkjet. Ralf is a consultant and technology analyst providing insights on technologies, applications, business models and market development. He is also an expert on market sizing and statistical sources around the printing industry.

