US Demand for Labels to Reach $20 Billion in 2015
US label shipments are forecast to rise 4.8
percent annually to $20 billion in 2015. The
pressure sensitive segment will continue to
dominate output, accounting for more than 70
percent of the total. Although pressure
sensitive labels will expand at a healthy rate,
they will continue to face growing competition
from alternative labeling methods such as
stretch sleeve, heat-shrink and in-mold
labels. Among these, heat-shrink labels are
projected to advance at the fastest rate through
2015, with gains attributable to their ability
to form-fit contoured containers, providing
360-degree graphics and a broad promotional area
which enable consumer products to stand out on
crowded store shelves. These and other trends,
including market share and product segmentation,
are presented in
US Labels, a new
study from The Freedonia Group, Inc., a
Cleveland-based industry research firm.
Paper will remain by far the leading stock
material in the label industry for the
foreseeable future. However, it will
continue to lose market share to plastic, which
will account for more than one-quarter of label
shipments in 2015. Plastic stock materials will
gain popularity due to their aesthetic and
performance advantages over paper, as well as a
broad shift in favor of plastic
packaging. Moreover, plastic is heavily utilized
in pressure sensitive, heat-shrink, stretch
sleeve, in-mold and thermal transfer labels,
each of which is expected to grow at a healthy
rate. Among plastic label resins, polypropylene
and polyvinyl chloride are widely used, although
the latter will lose out to other plastic
substrates with lower perceived environmental
and health risks. In particular, trends favoring
more environmentally friendly substrates will
propel gains for polylactic acid, albeit from a
very small base.
Primary packaging represents the leading
application for labels in the US market. Label
demand in this sector will be driven by a shift
in product mix favoring higher-value label types
(including large, full-body labels, plastic
labels and those featuring higher-end inks and
printing technologies), as labels play a crucial
role in the building of brand identity in an
intensely competitive consumer product
marketplace. However, the secondary packaging
and mailing and shipping segments will achieve
more rapid demand gains. In secondary labeling,
advances will be supported by the penetration of
barcoding labels in the transportation and
distribution sector, along with the significant
potential for smart labeling markets such as
food safety applications.
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