Kyrodata
PanelNewsPricing
KyrodataAuditable on every query. No black box.
AboutNewsEditorialPrivacyTermsRefundSupport
© 2026 Kyrodata. All rights reserved.
  1. Imports

South Korea goes from US$ 140k to US$ 11M in rolling machines, takes top spot

South Korea leaped 8 positions to become Brazil's top supplier of rolling machines, with its market share jumping from under 1% to nearly 32% in one year.

By··4 min·Updated on
Save
Editorial illustration on Brazil's imports of Calandras e laminadores, exceto os destinados ao tratamento de metais ou vidro, e seus cilindros with Coreia do Sul
Editorial illustration on Brazil's imports of Calandras e laminadores, exceto os destinados ao tratamento de metais ou vidro, e seus cilindros with Coreia do Sul

Summary

  • •From #9 to #1: South Korea became Brazil's top supplier of rolling and calendering machines in 2025.
  • •Explosive Growth: Imports from South Korea surged 78-fold, from US$ 140K to over US$ 11 million in one year.
  • •Market Share Leap: The country's share of Brazilian imports jumped from 0.8% in 2024 to 31.8% in 2025.
  • •Supply Chain Shift: The move indicates a significant realignment in sourcing for Brazilian industrial capital goods, away from traditional partners.

In a dramatic realignment of Brazil's industrial machinery procurement, South Korea has moved from a peripheral supplier to the dominant market leader for calendering or rolling machines. The country climbed eight positions in a single year, capturing the top spot in 2025 and demonstrating a significant shift in sourcing strategies by Brazilian manufacturers.

The ranking reshuffled

The year-end data for 2025 reveals a decisive change in the competitive landscape. In 2024, South Korea was a minor player, ranked ninth with exports to Brazil valued at just US$ 140,122. This represented a mere 0.8% of the total market share for these specialized machines, which are crucial in industries like textiles, plastics, and paper.

Read more

  • Brazilian pepper exports to Colombia surge roughly 7-fold

    Brazilian pepper exports to Colombia surge roughly 7-fold

  • Brazil's refined oil exports to Poland jump 7x

    Brazil's refined oil exports to Poland jump 7x

  • Turkish metal oxides surge 8x in Brazil's inorganic imports

    Turkish metal oxides surge 8x in Brazil's inorganic imports

By the close of 2025, the picture had been completely redrawn. Imports from South Korea skyrocketed to US$ 11.06 million, a 78-fold increase in FOB value. This explosive growth propelled the country to the number one position, claiming a commanding 31.8% of the market. This swift ascent suggests a strategic pivot by Brazilian importers, likely displacing several established European and North American suppliers who traditionally dominated the top ranks.

On the ground, what changes

This rapid consolidation around a new leading supplier has tangible consequences for Brazilian industrial operators. Shifting from a diversified supplier base, likely centered in Europe, to a primary source in East Asia introduces several operational variables.

First, logistics and lead times are fundamentally altered. While sea freight from Asia is well-established, transit times are typically longer compared to those from Europe. Importers will need to adjust their inventory management and production planning to accommodate these new timelines. This may require holding more critical spare parts on-site to mitigate risks of extended downtime during maintenance or repairs.

Second, commercial and technical negotiations will now be benchmarked against South Korean standards. This includes everything from payment terms and warranty conditions to after-sales service and technical support. Brazilian companies must adapt to different cultural and business practices. The technical specifications and operational technology of Korean machinery may also differ, necessitating new training protocols for floor operators and maintenance crews.

What to monitor from here

Should this trend of sourcing from South Korea solidify, it could signal a broader and more permanent shift in Brazil's capital goods supply chain. The success of Korean suppliers in this segment may encourage Brazilian importers of other types of industrial machinery to look more seriously at Asian alternatives, potentially eroding the market share of traditional Western manufacturers across multiple sectors.

We will be monitoring whether this concentration of supply in a single partner country persists. While it may offer price or technology advantages in the short term, it also introduces concentration risk. Any disruption to South Korea's manufacturing or export logistics could have a disproportionate impact on Brazilian industries reliant on these machines. The market's next move will be to either diversify again among other Asian suppliers or see a competitive response from the European players who were displaced.

What this means for you
For importers
  • Review and renegotiate service-level agreements (SLAs) for maintenance and spare parts with new Korean suppliers to ensure they meet or exceed the standards of previous vendors.
  • Stress-test your supply chain by qualifying at least one alternative supplier outside of South Korea to build resilience against potential disruptions.
  • European and American manufacturers must re-evaluate their value proposition, focusing on areas like customization, after-sales support, or specialized applications where they can still compete beyond price.

📊 View interactive dashboard: Calandras e laminadores, exceto os destinados ao tratamento de metais ou vidr… →

This analysis is written by the Kyrodata Editorial Team from official data. See our methodology →

Get analyses like this in your inbox →

The data behind this story

Explore the full series on Kyrodata

BR importsSH4 8420 · Calandras e laminadores, exceto os destinados ao tratamento de metais ou vidro, e seus cilindrosCoreia do Sul
Open in panel

Share this article

微QQ

Sources

  • ·MDIC ComexStat — capítulo 8420 (2025)
  • ·Kyrodata — dashboard interativo SH4 8420 (2025)

Topics

ImportsSouth KoreaCapital GoodsMarket Share
Home
News
Kyrodata Editorial Desk
Analyze freight and logistics costs to identify efficiencies that could help narrow the price gap with South Korean competitors.

Most popular

  1. 1

    U.S. wooden sleeper near-monopoly: Brazil's railway blind spot

    Concentration Risk

  2. 2

    Singapore vaults to #1 in Brazil's valve exports through April

    Exports

  3. 3

    Brazilian vinyl polymers to Colombia multiply 9x over two years

    Colombia

  4. 4

    Brazil's egg exports to the US jump roughly 1,000-fold through April

    Agribusiness

  5. 5

    Brazilian pharma imports from China jump +608% in the period

    Anomaly