Deere & Company DE far exceeded the Street’s first-quarter expectations. The company's $1.63 bottom line beat $1.26 consensus estimates, while sales of $7.63 billion surpassed forecasts of $6.42 billion.
For the most part, investors liked what they saw. Shares traded up 7.1% Friday morning. But some diminished Deere's achievement.
Bank of America analyst Ross Gilardi attributed most of the bottom-line outperformance to taxes, which contributed 27 cents per share, and to operating profit, which came in 3% ahead of consensus.
He also expressed disappointment that earnings before interest and tax declined 60% in the Construction and Forestry segment while cost and freight margins came in 3.5 percentage points below Bank of America’s forecasts.
“The good news of the quarter is that Ag & Turf margins of 8.4% (BofA 6.2%) were up 110 basis points YoY on a 4% decline in sales, snapping a 6 quarter streak of down margins for that segment, boosted by 3% pricing and cost declines that more than offset a $78 million voluntary separation headwind,” Gilardi wrote in a report.
However, he anticipates a rough-enough performance in the near term to warrant an Underperform rating.
“We were honestly a little surprised that Deere did not reduce Europe and South America given weak trends, though Deere did not acknowledge a soft start to the year in Brazil,” Gilardi wrote.
Bank of America maintained an Underperform rating on Deere with a $150 price target.
Deere's stock traded higher by 7.3% to $178 per share at time of publication.
Related Links:
Deere Trades Lower Despite Q4 Sales Beat, Forecasts Drop In Agriculture Sales
Wells Fargo Downgrades Deere And Caterpillar, Sees 'Likely Need To Cut Production Soon'
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Date | ticker | name | Actual EPS | EPS Surprise | Actual Rev | Rev Surprise |
---|
Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.