Caterpillar Reports; Not Much New
Source: http://briskycapital.blogspot.com/2009/10/caterpillar-reports-not-much-new.htmlPosted on Tuesday, October 20th, 2009 | In Energy Markets, Investing Lessons, Market Commentary
Caterpillar reported quarterly results this morning. I like to keep an eye on companies like Cat due to their cyclical nature and I feel they can give us a tell on if the economy is improving. They beat estimates, which were laughable. Sales and profits are still substantially down, and they are selling the hope, just like many others. Here are some quotes from the a href=”http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087amp;sid=aUXMwIFXBil8″Bloomberg article/a.br /br /blockquote“We believe the third quarter marked the low point for Caterpillar sales and revenues in what has been the toughest recession since the 1930s,” Owens said in the statement. “We are seeing encouraging signs that indicate a recovery may be under way.”br /br /The company narrowed its 2009 forecast range to $1.85 to $2.05 a share, from $1.15 to $2.25. The average estimate was $1.48 a share and the highest prediction was $1.75. The revenue forecast is now $32 billion to $33 billion, compared with its previous a href=”http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/quote?ticker=CAT%3AUS” t_above=”true” t_static=”true” t_fontcolor=”#000000″ t_fontface=”Verdana,sans-serif” t_bgcolor=”#ddedd9″ t_width=”110″ t_delay=”50″forecast/a of $32 billion to $36 billion.br /br /“The world economy is still facing significant challenges,” Owens said in today’s statement. “There is uncertainty about the timing and strength of recovery.”br /br /“We’ve already started planning for an upturn,” Owens said in the statement. “When it comes, it can come quickly, and we, our dealers and our suppliers will be prepared.”br /br /In a preliminary forecast, Caterpillar today predicted 2010 sales would increase 10 percent to 25 percent from the midpoint of the 2009 forecast range, partly driven by the end of dealer inventory reductions.br //blockquotebr /As I’ve said before many times, and will continue to say, selling the hope is okay. The economy may have bottomed. But Wall Street has been buying the hope big time since late spring. Now stocks are just too expensive and have fully priced in a recovery which has yet to appear. That’s why its dangerous to just “buy stocks”, which is my term for just jumping back in. I still think there are deals out there, but large cap stocks have just been bid up too high in my opinion.br /br /Onward…div class=”blogger-post-footer”img width=’1′ height=’1′ src=’https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/819581243324579563-5228238621485875738?l=briskycapital.blogspot.com’ alt=” //div
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![]() About Michael E. Brisky (http://briskycapital.blogspot.com)
Welcome to "In the Know." Here I discuss macro trends in the market, and how I think investors can profit from them. I particularly follow energy stocks and other beneficiaries of secular growth. My investing style would best be described as a hybrid. A hybrid of value and growth; of fundamental and technical analysis. I think you have to be flexible to be a successful investor, but also disciplined. |



