Caterpillar Beats Earnings, Stock Gets Pummeled. Why?

 | Apr 25, 2018 08:41AM ET

Blowout Quarter

On Tuesday before the markets opened, Caterpillar (CAT ) reported record Q1 sales and earnings and raised guidance for the rest of 2018 by almost 25%. The stock immediately rallied nearly 5% to $161.10 in the pre-market session as investors digested the seemingly flawless earnings release.

Revenues for the quarter were $12.9B, 31% higher than Q1 2017 and handily beating the Zacks consensus estimate of $11.58B. Net earnings on a non-adjusted basis were $2.74/share, blowing away the consensus estimate of $2.11/Share. (Earnings adjusted for non-recurring restructuring costs were even slightly higher still at $2.82/share.)

The company was a beneficiary of 2018 U.S. tax reform, estimating an effective rate of 24% for the quarter versus 32% in Q1 2017.

Caterpillar raised guidance for 2018 a whopping 2 dollars to a range of $9.75 - $10.25/share from the previous range of $7.75 – $8.25/share. They cited continuing strong demand in each of the core industries they sell equipment to with Mining, Oil and Gas, Construction and Infrastructure all experiencing boom times. Sales increased across all regions.

Even the parts of the release that were supposed to be cautionary were generic boilerplate about “economic conditions” and unpredictable Pension costs. Hardly anything to be worried about.

By the end of the trading day Caterpillar stock was closing at $144.44, down over 6% for the session.