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Wednesday, April 25, 2012

China concerns trump Caterpillar profit, outlook - Reuters

Wed Apr 25, 2012 1:03pm EDT

  * Q1 EPS $2.37 vs $2.13 Wall Street forecast      * Sales up 23 pct at $16 bln vs $16.2 bln Wall Street view      * Lifts FY 2012 EPS to $9.50 from $9.25      * Shares down 5 pct on China concerns, modest outlook          By John D. Stoll          April 25 (Reuters) - Concerns about a slowdown in China and  other key emerging markets overshadowed Caterpillar Inc's   better-than-expected rise in first-quarter profit,  sending its shares down 5 percent during Wednesday's trading  session.              Caterpillar continued a string of strong quarterly  performances, posting a 29 percent profit increase by relying on  its growing mining business and sales to U.S. buyers looking to  replace aging equipment. The world's largest maker of  construction machinery also increased its profit guidance for  the year.             But investors latched on to the company's slowdown in China  and Brazil, and continued concern about Europe. This only stoked  Wall Street's existing fears about emerging markets during the  current earnings season.              Doubts about China were coupled with additional concern over  the way the company went about lifting its full-year forecast.        "The quarter was good, but guidance was only increased by  the amount of the beat and revenue guidance was unchanged,"  Jefferies & Co equities analyst Stephen Volkmann said in a note  to investors. He said the company's growing inventory levels  "may raise some investor concerns."           In recent quarters, Caterpillar has been a leading player in  a U.S. industrial sector that has shrugged off economic fears by  posting record profits and providing an optimistic outlook.  While emerging markets have provided an increasing slice of  sales growth, an improving U.S. economy is increasingly  underpinning the performance of these companies.              "We just continue to see throughout this quarter that North  America continues to be strong for these industrial companies,  and that is definitely true for Caterpillar," Jeff Windau, an  analyst with Edward Jones, said.              <---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->                    CHINA PLAN        Caterpillar has been investing heavily in capacity and is  aggressively chasing sales in that market, and it now has too  much inventory in the China.          Executives moved to allay concerns by addressing the issue  during its first-quarter conference call with analysts. Mike  DeWalt, director of Caterpillar investor relations, said the  China market -- while important -- does not have a massive  impact on bottom line at this point. And the company is  convinced China's government has a solid long-term growth plan.       "It's an important market particularly for the future,"  DeWalt said. As for its influence on Caterpillar's results:  "It's just not as significant as many people believe."        He also said that pricing is holding up despite concerns  that there is too much production capacity in the industry.           Still, the company is taking action to mitigate any  short-term concerns.          DeWalt said the company has "too many finished goods on the  ground." As a result, Caterpillar will divert about 20 percent  of its China excavator production to other countries where  demand is much stronger for that equipment.           The company also is willing to tweak its growth blueprint  for the country. While Caterpillar is not cancelling any of its  expansion plans, it could slow the timing of those projects if  the need arises, DeWalt said.                   'WE REMAIN ON TRACK'              While traditional construction markets are weak, North  American customers are scrambling to replace aging machinery,  including excavators and bulldozers. This is taking place as  construction companies work to keep up with a backlog of  expansion projects in the United States and Canada, including a  relative boom in the energy sector.           Many of these construction companies did not buy new  machinery from 2008 through 2010 due to credit constraints and a  lack of business. Now, they are rushing into the market, helping  drive Caterpillar's backlog to $30.7 billion, or $10 billion  more than it was a year ago.          Another factor driving Caterpillar is growing strength in  the mining business, which was bolstered by its 2011 acquisition  of Wisconsin-based Bucyrus. The company's power equipment sales,  including locomotives and engines needed for gas and oil  companies, are also running at a solid clip.          "We remain on track ... at a time when U.S. construction  activity remains depressed and economies in Europe, China and  Brazil have slowed," Caterpillar Chief Executive Doug Oberhelman  said in a press release.  The slowing in China and Brazil comes  as those countries "took steps in 2011 to slow their economies  and bring inflation under control," Oberhelman said.          Brazil and China are expected to ease their policies.  "Although it's tough to predict the exact timing, we expect  positive economic growth moving forward," Oberhelman said.            The company will need its prediction to hold as it steadily  installs and expands global production capacity, leading to a  brisk hiring pace and increased costs related to lifting  production and headcount. In addition, material costs --  including steel prices -- continue to rise.                     MARGIN STRENGTH           Analysts were encouraged by the company's incremental profit  margins during the quarter, which were robust even as the  company only modestly raised prices.          "We thought the quality was good, especially in margins that  continue to improve without relying on the pricing lever," Rob  Wertheimer, a Vertical Research Partners analyst, said. The  company's strategy of lifting profit margins via productivity  and cost improvements on the plant floor is paying off, he said.              The strength in North America as emerging markets sag is  actually a positive trend for Caterpillar, Morningstar analyst  Adam Fleck said. Chinese customers tend to buy a larger  percentage of smaller, less-expensive machinery while buyers in  established markets more often opt for bigger goods.          Caterpillar reported net earnings of $1.6 billion, or $2.37  per share, compared with $1.2 billion, or $1.84 per share, a  year earlier.         Caterpillar's sales rose 23 percent to $16 billion during  the first quarter, the company said.          Analysts on average had projected a profit of $2.13 a share,  according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. Revenue, however, fell  short of the $16.2 billion that Wall Street had expected.            The company increased its profit outlook for the year to  $9.50 per share from $9.25 previously. The outlook for revenue,  however, remained in the range of $68 billion to $70 billion.        Caterpillar's resources segment, which includes mining,  delivered a 73 percent increase in revenue and a 46 percent jump  in earnings. Construction products reported a 13 percent jump in  both sales and profit.  

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