Deutsche Bank Slaps A Sell Rating On AGCO, Downgrades As 2015 Expectations Are 'Far Too Optimistic'


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In a report published Sunday, Deutsche Bank analyst Vishal Shah downgraded

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AGCO Corporation (NYSE: AGCO) to Sell from Hold with a price target slashed to $40 from a previous $48 as the market is "far too optimistic" over its 2015 earnings."In our view, expectations are too high for the Parts, GSI and EAME businesses, all of which carry higher than corporate average margins," Shah wrote. "Moreover AGCO has limited scope in the form of either additional cost savings or accelerated buybacks to offset these headwinds."AGCO's management has already guided its Parts sales (20 to 25 percent margins) to flat, but Shah noted that he expects sales to decline by five percent to 10 percent, resulting in an earnings per share drop of $0.15. Moreover, GSI sales (15 percent margins) has been guided to be up eight to 10 percent, but the analyst is only expecting a two to three percent increase, yielding a $0.05 earnings per share headwind.Shah also stated that the company's 2015 guidance is based on foreign exchange rates as of January 31. Since then, the Euro (40 percent of sales) has declined by around five percent and the Brazilian Real (15 percent of sales) has dropped by 12 percent. These foreign exchange moves alone amount to a $0.13 earnings per share headwind.Shah concluded that AGCO would need to find at least $55 million in immediate cost savings to offset the expected headwinds and doing so would be difficult in a short timeframe. Furthermore, management will likely be limited in its ability to buyback shares this year as free cash flow may fall short of the company's $300 million guidance while its cash balance is running at a multi-year low.
Posted In: Analyst ColorAnalyst RatingsDeutsche Bankeuroforeign exchangeShare BuybacksVishal Shah