Caterpillar Keeps Building Reasons for Investors to Stick Around

Editors note: This article was updated to correct that Caterpillar vehicles are diesel powered.

When inflation rears its head, the first thing analysts do is rush to buy Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT) stock.

Caterpillar (CAT) excavator vehicle backlit by sunset
Source: Shutterstock

Caterpillar makes big trucks, excavators, and other industrial machines. Inflation makes the things its machines move more valuable, so companies buy more of those machines. Analysts recommend CAT stock. That’s how it’s supposed to work.

Sure enough, just since the start of 2021, CAT is up almost 7%. Over the last six months, CAT investors have seen an increase nearly twice that of the average S&P 500 index stock. Caterpillar shares are up 42% versus a 25% gain in the gauge.

This is not yet reflected in the company’s business. For the third quarter, Caterpillar delivered earnings of just $1.22 a share on sales of $9.9 billion. The comparable figures for 2019 were .

Caterpillar , with earnings of $1.45 per share and revenue of $11.18 billion being .

Why the Optimism for CAT Stock

Despite the pandemic, Caterpillar quarterly dividend. That’s a yield of about 2.1%. If that sounds skimpy, the dividend was just 77 cents five years ago. A rising dividend and rising stock price compensate for a low yield. Over that five-year period, CAT is up 224%. That’s better than Facebook (NASDAQ:FB).

Investors who stayed with Caterpillar through the pandemic have prospered. Barron’s writer Al Root says they will . Caterpillar shares have been as analysts expect the global economy to pick up steam, as China’s did after its lockdown ended.

There’s more than just optimism at work here. Buying the oil and gas division of Weir Group, looks smart in the near term. Oil prices have been strong lately and should remain strong until renewable energy supplies increase. Global

.

While Caterpillar’s vehicles are mostly diesel-powered, because of their size, they can still improve by being autonomous. At the virtual CES, Caterpillar showed a new line of , backed by $2 billion of investment and more than 16,000 patents.

Still, Some Caution Advised

There are reasons to expect a short-term pullback, however. Some are contained in the optimists’ calls.

The Barron’s story, for instance, tells investors to buy CAT when its price-to-earnings ratio is low, and sell when its P/E is high. With the buying well ahead of the recovery, the P/E is 32 on a market cap of about $106 billion.

Let’s assume that 2020 was a one-off, however. In 2019 Caterpillar earned $10.74 per share. A return to that 2019 level puts that P/E at just 18.1, which is well below the market’s average multiple of .

The average analyst also isn’t out ahead of their skis. Tipranks has CAT as just a moderate buy, with four of 10 analysts saying to buy the stock and one saying sell it. Their average is more than 4% below where it was trading on Jan. 19.

Stable in the Long-Term

Caterpillar is a very stable long-term investment.

For those in retirement, or nearing it, CAT stock offers a dividend as well as capital gains. It’s one of those stocks you should look to accumulate starting at age 55, and then stay in.

Right now, it looks expensive. The short-term optimism looks overdone. But if you’re willing to let time work for you, there’s never a bad time to own a good company.

Management’s didn’t make Caterpillar abandon its long-time home of Peoria. Its building there, over the Illinois River, overlooking I-74 and Upper Peoria Lake, still dominates the skyline. As it will for years to come.

At the time of publication, Dana Blankenhorn owned no shares in companies mentioned in this story.

has been a financial and technology journalist since 1978. He is the author of , available at the Amazon Kindle store. Write him at , tweet him at , or subscribe to his

has been a financial and technology journalist since 1978. He is the author of , available at the Amazon Kindle store. Tweet him at , connect with him on or subscribe to his .


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