Journal Star

Caterpilla­r warns its heavy machinery sales may drop

- Deborah Mary Sophia Reuters

Caterpilla­r on Thursday warned of a sales drop in the current quarter as volumes take a hit from dealers tightening equipment inventorie­s, sparking worries that a months-long boom in machinery demand may be coming to an end.

Shares of the global economy bellwether slumped 7% in morning trade as it said end-user sales of its machines was weaker than planned. The stock had gained about 23% for the year so far as of Wednesday’s close and hit a record high earlier in April.

Caterpilla­r reported weak constructi­on equipment sales in all regions except North America, where constructi­on demand is expected to stay healthy for the rest of the year thanks to the U.S. government’s $1 trillion infrastruc­ture law.

Still, that was not enough to offset a slump in demand in Europe and prolonged weakness in China, where economic uncertaint­ies have weakened constructi­on activity, prompting a cutback in production of certain machines.

“We’ve been pretty discipline­d about making sure that we have cut production like, for example, in excavators ... where we do see softness in the market,” Caterpilla­r CFO Andrew Bonfield said.

Sales at Caterpilla­r’s constructi­on equipment business, which makes its ubiquitous yellow excavators, fell 5% in the first quarter, while its segment that caters to natural resources industries reported a sales decline of 7%.

“I do think we have to kind of re-evaluate and think through what execution would look like. (Machines sales) came in a bit weaker and that doesn’t give me great confidence as we head through the

year ... we definitely are walking away with more questions,” M Science senior analyst Alex Prudhomme said.

The Texas-based company, which employs roughly 12,000 in the Peoria area, forecast roughly flat sales for the year.

Still, Caterpilla­r is banking on higher prices and flattening manufactur­ing costs to pad margins in the second quarter. Its first-quarter adjusted profit of $5.60 per share surpassed estimates of $5.14, according to LSEG data.

Dealer inventory concerns grow

Coming off of a strong 2023 where supply chain concerns and soaring demand prompted dealers to bulk up on heavy equipment, U.S. machinery makers are now seeing a moderation in product stocking at dealers, forcing them to tighten their inventorie­s.

Caterpilla­r said dealer inventorie­s for machines grew a higher-than-expected $1.1 billion in the quarter due to sales to end-users being “modestly lower” than it had anticipate­d.

Its order backlog increased just $400 million on a sequential basis, but executives said they were confident that end-market demand would be stable this year.

“Dealer inventory is comfortabl­y within what we consider a typical range, so we are not concerned about it,” CEO Jim Umpleby told analysts on a postearnin­gs call.

Still, with investors zeroing in on dealer inventorie­s, Caterpilla­r’s results dragged shares of its rivals Deere and CNH Industrial down more than 1% on Thursday.

For the first quarter ended March 31, Caterpilla­r’s revenue fell slightly to $15.80 billion, missing estimates of $16.04 billion.

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Peoria Police Det. Jason Leigh identifies a photograph of Navin Jones’ bedroom where the boy had been locked in and starved by his mother Stephanie Jones and his father Brandon Walker during Thursday’s sentencing hearing.
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SARAH LAPIDUS/ARIZONA REPUBLIC More than 200 protesters participat­e in a rally Thursday at University of Arizona, organized by Students for Justice in Palestine.
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