National Post

Caterpilla­r sales soar but CFO warns of margin pressure

- BIANCA FLOWERS AND UDAY SAMPATH KUMAR

Caterpilla­r Inc topped Wall Street estimates with a fourth quarter revenue increase of more than 20 per cent, but the heavy-equipment maker warned operating margins in the current quarter could be hit by higher production and labour costs.

Shares of the world’s largest constructi­on and mining equipment maker fell six per cent in New York Stock Exchange trading.

Factory shutdowns, clogged ports and labour shortages triggered by the pandemic have hammered companies across industries over the last year, causing manufactur­ing costs to soar and production lines to freeze.

“Supply chain has been a wild card for all of us in 2021,” Chief Financial Officer Andrew Bonfield told Reuters in an interview.

Caterpilla­r said it expects to raise prices again this year, after hiking rates twice last year, to help mitigate some of the soaring costs.

Public spending, like U.S. President Joe Biden’s US$1 trillion infrastruc­ture law, are giving Caterpilla­r’s customers the confidence to buy new equipment, Bonfield told investors on a call.

Higher demand and Caterpilla­r’s ongoing cost-control measures have helped anchor the company’s bottom line, but supply chain constraint­s are weighing on operating margins.

“The broad-based strength in demand was overshadow­ed by higher-than-expected manufactur­ing costs due to production inefficien­cies,” said Rene Lipsch, Senior Credit Officer for Moody’s Corp.

The company said it expects headwinds to its adjusted operating profit margin in the first quarter versus a year earlier, but sees improvemen­t throughout the rest of the year.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell has signalled an imminent rise in short-term interest rates could come as early as March. With rates being near zero since the onset of the pandemic, the Fed anticipate­s tighter monetary policy and strong job growth could help tame inflation, though some analysts predict it will do little to relieve supply-chain snags.

“Given the overall demand outlook that’s strong, I don’t think a rise in interest rates will have an impact on the supply chain in the near term,” said Chad Dillard, senior analyst at Bernstein.

Total revenue rose 23 per cent to US$13.80 billion in the fourth quarter as constructi­on demand across most of its regions saw unpreceden­ted public spending.

Analysts, on average, had estimated revenue of US$13.15 billion, according to Refinitiv data.

The company reported a profit of US$2.12 billion in the quarter ended Dec. 31, compared with US$780 million a year earlier. On an adjusted basis, Caterpilla­r earned US$2.69 per share, topping analysts estimates for US$2.26 a share, according to Refinitiv.

 ?? MIKE BLAKE / REUTERS FILES ?? Caterpilla­r Inc. reported a profit of US$2.12 billion in the quarter ended Dec. 31, but it warns margins in this quarter could be squeezed by production and labour costs.
MIKE BLAKE / REUTERS FILES Caterpilla­r Inc. reported a profit of US$2.12 billion in the quarter ended Dec. 31, but it warns margins in this quarter could be squeezed by production and labour costs.

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