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Mark Andy turns against the industry ¡ My name is Morten B. Reitoft, and I am the editor of INKISH

When a label or flexo converter considers buying a new press, the process should be straightforward. You sit down with your numbers, weigh technology against features, evaluate price against value, and make the best decision for your business. Sometimes you compare what’s available on the market: perhaps another supplier offers the same at a better price, or something more advanced for the same money. It’s not a daily exercise—you don’t invest in a new press every week—but when you do, the decision matters. The wrong press can cripple you for years; the right one can secure your future. Some care deeply about buying American-made. Others chase the cheapest machines from China. Most care about performance, service, workflow integration, and reliability—factors that determine whether the press actually strengthens their business. In a free economy, those choices should be yours. It should not be dictated by politics. Unfortunately, in America today, the flexo market is already distorted by the simple fact that there is only one major manufacturer left: Mark Andy. When Donald Trump became president, tariffs were inevitable. It wasn’t a surprise. What seems to be forgotten, however, is that tariffs are not paid by the sellers. They are paid by you, the American converters and printers. Bobst doesn’t pay. Gallus doesn’t pay. MPS doesn’t pay. You do. The 15% tariff on flexo presses negotiated between the US and the EU was already painful, but at least predictable. You could run the numbers and see the impact. Geography softened the blow—Europe is far away, after all. But Canada and Mexico are right next door, and their converters can now deliver products into the US without carrying the same cost burden. Currency only makes it worse. The dollar has lost around 15% of its value against the euro. That means you’re not only facing a 15% tariff, but you’re also paying 15% more in currency exchange fees. Suddenly, the press you had your eye on is 30% more expensive than it was just a few years ago. And now comes the real outrage. Recently, Mark Andy’s leadership wrote to Washington asking for flexo presses to be classified not as presses, but as steel, subject to a 50% tariff. Let’s be honest: this is not about fairness. Yes, presses contain steel, but they are not steel. This is a blatant attempt by one company to bend the rules for its own selfish benefit. Converters have always chosen Bobst, Gallus, MPS, or others because those presses offered something better: higher productivity, superior quality, or features that met specific needs. To now claim that American-made presses are “cheaper” only because competitors are artificially handicapped is dishonest. It is manipulation dressed up as patriotism. Why should Washington decide which machines you can buy? Why should a single manufacturer believe it has the right to use political influence to block your choices? Every monopoly in history has led to higher prices, lower innovation, and stagnation. Without competition, R&D dries up. Customers pay more for less. That is not what a free economy looks like—it is what protectionism and corporate lobbying create. And don’t think the rest of the world will sit idle. European manufacturers will look to Canada, Mexico, and Latin America instead, exporting freely into markets that can then indirectly feed the US. The distortion will not disappear; it will simply grow more complex, leaving you—American converters—trapped in the middle. Do you honestly believe that every converter in the United States will one day operate exclusively with Mark Andy equipment? Of course not. And you shouldn’t. American converters still possess tremendous strengths, including craftsmanship, the ability to produce short runs, exclusive labels, and high-quality work. But for one supplier to make it harder—almost impossible—for you to access the presses you truly need to compete is nothing less than sabotage of your future. Tariffs should protect national security, not serve as a means for corporate vanity projects. What we are witnessing is not a matter of economic policy. It is selfishness weaponized. And that, friends, is a reality you cannot afford to ignore.

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Keith Michael ¡ CEO ¡ Lebone Litho Printers ¡ Investing in Fujifilm

Keith Michael is the founder and owner of Lebone Litho in Johannesburg, and many sides to this story are surprising. First and foremost, what should one expect when driving through a city that has slums and the most beautiful buildings? We arrive at a street where it seems Lebone has taken over most of it. The facades are renovated, and when we arrive at the reception, you realize before even entering the company that Lebone is beyond most printing companies. In the board room, we meet with Keith Michael - a fantastic personality whose background is in plastics, and you soon realize a person who has an eye for detail. No dust and no mess. Wherever we go in the large facility, his eyes are everywhere, and his people know it. Lebone has about 600 employees and though we "only" visit Lebone Litho, the next door buildings have large format, multi-media, publishing, and across the street a super optimized production of exam papers, including scanning facilities to afterwards scan the submitted papers and deliver an electronic output - and I can go on - but we are at Lebone covering Fujifilm Jetpress S750 and some of Fujifilms highly acclaimed print bars, mounted on various printing and finishing machines. Keith Michaels is obviously proud of what he has achieved for good reasons, and when listening to his personal story, everything becomes even more impressive, as he lived in a township before the end of apartheid. Besides the continued growth of Lebone, Keith Michael is also giving back to his community, having donated to the construction of five churches. We are impressed.