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Daifuku ties factory expansion and M&A to a bigger bet on semiconductor and logistics automation demand

Newsroom brief

Daifuku used a May 28, 2026 briefing in Tokyo to outline how heavier capital spending and selective acquisitions are meant to support its fiscal 2030 sales target of ¥1 trillion. The plan includes ¥1.6 trillion in investment across fiscal 2024-2027, added capacity in Shiga and Komaki, and the planned acquisition of Germany’s Eisenmann to strengthen its automotive business in Europe. The move matters beyond one company because it signals confidence that chip fabs, cleanroom production and large-scale intralogistics projects will keep demanding more complex material-handling systems and software.

Verified against source materialEdited by SendTech Times Chips & Compute Desk
Daifuku ties factory expansion and M&A to a bigger bet on semiconductor and logistics automation demand
Image source: MONOist

What Happened

Daifuku on May 28, 2026, detailed growth investments tied to its long-term vision, “Driving Innovative Impact 2030,” under which it is targeting sales of ¥1 trillion by fiscal 2030.

The company said it will invest about ¥52 billion during 2026-2029 in areas including M&A and production capacity reinforcement to improve competitiveness.

It also laid out a broader capital plan of ¥160 billion over fiscal 2024-2027: ¥80 billion already planned for regular equipment renewal and R&D over three years, plus an additional ¥80 billion strategic investment allocation.

The spending is intended for next-generation R&D and production equipment.

At its Shiga site in Hino, Shiga Prefecture, Daifuku has been redeveloping the mother factory since 2024 to raise production capacity and optimize factory logistics.

New buildings for general manufacturing and distribution systems began operating in July 2025, and a new building for semiconductor production-line systems began operating in April 2026.

Those projects involved about ¥22 billion.

Daifuku is now planning roughly ¥30 billion more for two additional Shiga buildings: one for intralogistics production capacity and warehouse use, and another warehouse building for the cleanroom and automotive businesses.

The Shiga site would then total 17 buildings.

The company is also investing about ¥10 billion to fully renovate an existing building at its Komaki site in Aichi Prefecture, which produces components including non-contact power supply devices, power panels and control panels for overhead hoist transport systems used in cleanrooms.

Construction and renovation are scheduled for completion during 2029-2030.

Daifuku said production space versus 2023 will expand to about 1.3 times in intralogistics and about 2 times in cleanroom operations.

Outside Japan, Daifuku said it is building a new factory in India to quadruple production capacity for its global intralogistics manufacturing base and renovating an existing US plant to double capacity.

In automotive, it announced in April 2026 that it would acquire Germany-based Eisenmann, which handles conveyor systems for auto production lines and industrial painting equipment.

The expected acquisition price is about ¥12 billion, with closing planned for July 2026.

The company said it will continue exploring M&A without setting constraints by industry or region.

R&D is also being expanded.

Daifuku set up Kyoto Lab in 2025 for advanced technologies needed by business divisions and established Tokyo Lab in 2026 to pursue mid- to long-term development in areas including physical AI and robotics.

By 2027, Kyoto Lab is planned to have 90 staff and Tokyo Lab 50.

Why It Matters

The immediate significance is that Daifuku is investing not only in floor space but in the ability to serve much larger and more software-intensive automation projects.

President Tomoaki Terai said projects that once involved 100 transport vehicles are now reaching 1,000 vehicles in a single large factory, and 10 connected factories could imply about 10,000 vehicles and total transport routes of 300 kilometers.

He also emphasized the importance of software reliability in running those systems.

That matters here because the company is positioning for demand where material handling is becoming a system-level bottleneck rather than a peripheral equipment purchase.

In semiconductor and cleanroom environments, delivery timing, uptime and integration quality could matter as much as hardware output.

If fab and advanced manufacturing investments stay elevated, suppliers able to scale both equipment production and control software may be better placed to win larger packages.

Global Context

This fits a wider industrial pattern in which automation suppliers are expanding near major manufacturing hubs and trying to deepen their role inside production workflows.

Broadly, semiconductor capacity build-outs, warehouse modernization and more automated automotive plants have increased demand for conveyors, hoist transport, controls and orchestration software.

Daifuku’s India and US capacity moves suggest a hedging strategy across regions, while the Eisenmann acquisition points to a push for stronger local relevance in Europe.

More generally, the competitive field is shifting from standalone machinery toward integrated platforms that combine equipment, power systems, controls, robotics and software.

The company’s use of the term physical AI in its Tokyo Lab plans suggests it sees future differentiation coming from smarter autonomous or semi-autonomous factory operations, though the commercial pace of that transition remains uncertain.

Industry Impact

For semiconductor and cleanroom customers, Daifuku’s expansion could improve supply assurance if demand remains strong, especially for overhead transport-related systems and adjacent controls.

For automotive manufacturers, the Eisenmann deal could broaden Daifuku’s process coverage in Europe beyond conveying into paint-related stages.

For rivals, the message is that scale, regional manufacturing footprint and software credibility are increasingly linked.

The announcement is also notable for showing that M&A is being treated as a capability tool, not only a market-share tool.

That could encourage further consolidation across specialist automation, controls and production-line engineering segments if customers continue favoring larger, end-to-end suppliers.

What To Watch Next

Key near-term markers are whether the Eisenmann acquisition closes in July 2026 as planned, whether the added Shiga and Komaki projects stay on schedule for 2029-2030 completion, and how quickly the labs scale to their planned 2027 headcounts.

Investors and customers will also likely watch whether cleanroom and intralogistics demand remains strong enough to justify the new capacity.

Another open question is how much of Daifuku’s future edge comes from software and AI-enabled control rather than purely from hardware output.

The article does not provide deployment-scale metrics beyond examples cited by management, nor does it disclose future revenue contribution by segment, so the commercial payoff from these investments will need to be tracked over time.

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