The recent strategic partnership between GEEKPLUS-W (ASX: 02590) and Mindugar, a leading industrial storage systems provider in Latin America, is a significant step to offer integrated smart warehousing solutions to regional businesses. While such collaborations are common, the timing and choice of partner are particularly strategic. The Latin American smart warehousing and logistics sector is experiencing explosive growth. According to MarkNtel Advisors, the region's warehouse automation market is projected to reach $1.5 billion by 2025, with an expected compound annual growth rate of 11.48% to hit $3.21 billion by 2032. Aligning with Mindugar allows GEEKPLUS to rapidly localize its operations in Latin America. With over 50 years of experience in the region, Mindugar possesses deep insights into local warehouse construction methods, operator workflows, and client decision-making processes—a level of operational proximity that is difficult for an overseas technology provider to build independently in a short timeframe.
Latin America's Golden Window for Warehouse Automation
Driven by the rapid expansion of e-commerce and the rise of omnichannel retail, Latin America's warehousing and logistics sector is undergoing a historic shift towards intelligence. Official data indicates Brazil's e-commerce industry alone is projected to generate approximately $36.3 billion in revenue by 2025, with around 94 million Brazilians shopping online, an increase of 3 million from last year. This reflects deepening digital adoption among consumers and intensifying pressure on fulfillment systems. As noted by MarkNtel Advisors, e-commerce accelerates warehouse automation by increasing parcel volumes and raising delivery expectations. For instance, online retail sales in Latin America are forecast to reach $215.31 billion by 2026, with 84% of transactions being mobile-first, concentrated in Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico. The growth in online shopping demand is pushing logistics networks to adopt systems like automated sorting, robotics, and real-time tracking to meet next-day and same-day delivery demands, thereby increasing throughput and reducing error rates.
Beyond e-commerce expansion, the growth of the warehouse automation market in Latin America is closely tied to digital transformation initiatives. Strategies like Brazil's E-Digital 2022–2026 aim to broaden digital infrastructure and encourage technology adoption across industries, including logistics and automation technologies that support warehouse modernization. Similarly, Mexico's National Digital Strategy focuses on expanding internet access and digital services, fostering platforms that promote e-commerce and logistics evolution. Influenced by these dual factors, Latin America's warehouse automation market is valued at around $1.5 billion for 2025 and is expected to grow to $3.21 billion by 2032. The market is anticipated to achieve a compound annual growth rate of approximately 11.48% from 2026 to 2032.
Local Partners Ease Implementation Friction
On the flip side, despite the current growth window for the smart warehousing industry, many Latin American companies still grapple with operational inefficiencies, poor space utilization, and rising labor costs, creating an urgent need for integrated, scalable smart warehousing solutions. GEEKPLUS's technology portfolio directly addresses this demand. The partnership will focus on deploying GEEKPLUS's flagship picking solutions—the Goods-to-Person and Bin-to-Person systems—driven by its intelligent software platform to achieve deep hardware-software integration and efficient, unified operation. This approach helps clients boost throughput efficiency, improve operational accuracy, and maximize warehouse space utilization.
Mindugar's local roots make this technological deployment feasible. As noted by industry expert Alfredo Pastor Tella in a recent commentary, warehouse automation is inherently a physical business; selling robots globally is far easier than deploying them efficiently at scale. Each installation contends with local regulations, warehouse standards, client processes, infrastructure limitations, and varying operational maturity. Layouts evolve, temporary storage becomes permanent, racks degrade, peak traffic densities shift, and clients modify operational logic faster than software architectures anticipate. These "small realities" accumulate into complexity. A local partner understands how facilities are actually built, the work habits of operators, how clients react under production pressure, and how to resolve issues quickly post-deployment. This operational proximity becomes invaluable during international expansion, which underpins the logic behind GEEKPLUS's partnership with Mindugar.
Tella points out that collaborating with a regional partner involves sharing some project profits, but it mitigates an equally critical issue: operational friction. Goods-to-Person systems are attractive in Latin America precisely because they allow for incremental automation, relatively flexible layouts, and scalability. Implementing such projects requires tight integration between robots, racking systems, software, and operational processes. In this context, Mindugar is not merely a reseller but part of the infrastructure strategy. Tella further observes that this collaboration reflects a broader evolution in the AMR industry: the market is gradually shifting from a technology race to an execution race. GEEKPLUS's recent financial performance points in this direction—the company is growing revenue and reducing losses. The next challenge is to make global growth operationally sustainable. This entails reducing deployment complexity, increasing standardization, accelerating commissioning, and maintaining support quality across diverse markets. In this scenario, local partners are no longer simple distributors; they become integral to the business model itself.
Comments