MAXAM Group in Southern Europe
Southern Europe combines industrial know-how with growing reshoring momentum. MAXAM Group is based in Verona, Italy, facilitating partnerships between Asian investors and established European SME manufacturers.
Southern Europe at a glance
3
Countries Covered
25+
Industrial Clusters
20+
MAXAM Projects
3+
Years Present
MAXAM Offices
Verona
Via Leoncino 10, 37121 Verona VR, Italy
Key Advantages
Industrial Know-How
Home to world-class clusters in fashion, machinery, food, and ceramics.
Reshoring Momentum
Government incentives actively support bringing manufacturing back to the region.
Mediterranean Logistics
Key port infrastructure connecting Europe to Asia and North Africa.
Design Expertise
Unique combination of engineering precision and design excellence valued globally.
Case Study from this region
The 6,000-Kilometre Shortcut: How a European Yacht Brand Moved Its Production from China to Antalya
A Northern European sailing yacht manufacturer with an established brand in the 35 to 55-foot performance cruiser segment — a category where buyers are sophisticated, specifications exacting, and the brand's word-of-mouth reputation in the European sailing community is the primary commercial asset. The company designed its boats in-house and sold through marinas and dealerships across Northern and Western Europe, but manufactured hulls and completed final assembly at a subcontractor facility in southern China. The arrangement, made a decade earlier for its margin advantage, was by 2023 failing on four dimensions simultaneously: Chinese labour-cost inflation had eroded the cost gap to the point where it no longer justified the operational complexity; finish quality had drifted across three production cycles, generating warranty claims and unflattering comments in the sailing press; a six-week ocean transit pushed the order-to-delivery cycle to eight to ten months against competitors delivering in four to six; and the production director was losing some forty days a year to supervision flights across nine time zones. Management concluded the China arrangement had to end — but had no clear answer to where a Europe-adjacent alternative might exist.
Lead time cut from 9 to 5 months
Read the full case study →Practical Information
Regulatory Overview
- Local business entity requirements and registration process
- Import/export regulations and customs documentation
- Labor law, employment contracts, and social contributions
- Environmental compliance and industrial permitting
Logistics Overview
- Main sea ports and container terminal capacities
- Road and rail freight corridors to key markets
- Bonded warehouse and free trade zone availability
- Average transit times to Western European markets
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