Tag Archives: South Milwaukee

Is Caterpillar Digging Itself a Deeper Hole?

By Rich Duprey, The Motley Fool

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Just days after announcing cuts of up to 300 employees at its South Milwaukee facility that it acquired from Bucyrus, heavy-equipment manufacturer Caterpillar laid off 460 workers at its Decatur, Ill., plant, again citing mining industry weakness. The Decatur plant is a manufacturing facility that runs a foundry, overhaul, and remanufacturing, and where the South Milwaukee layoffs have been deemed temporary, these are said to be permanent. All told, the company wants to eliminate about 2,000 jobs.

A deep hole
Caterpillar identifies coal, iron ore, gold, copper, and oil and natural gas as primary users of its equipment, so it’s easy to see why the equipment maker is taking it on the chin. Mining companies are abandoning the coal industry in droves.

Rio Tinto recently announced its intention to sell off its Australian coal assets while also seeking “strategic alternatives” for its copper and gold mines. Despite global financial turmoil, gold is incongruously slipping as a safe haven, as billionaire investor George Soros recently pointed out.

While I see that as a temporary response to the currency destruction being engineered by central bankers — people only have their gold to sell to get cash, so it’s depressing the price — BHP Billiton is also looking to strip away things it now considers unessential to its main operations, and it has idled a number of coal mines and is looking to shed oil and gas assets because they’re deemed the easiest to get rid of. Cliffs Natural Resources is idling iron pellet facilities because of weakness in the steel industry.

Demand an answer
As I noted over the weekend, fourth-quarter coal consumption in the U.S. tumbled 11%, according to the Energy Information Administration, and production was down 12%. It’s not looking much better in steel.

The World Steel Association says that while China‘s crude steel production jumped nearly 10% in February, it was down almost everywhere else in the world, with the U.S. experiencing an 11.8% falloff, amounting to a 1.2% global increase in production. But with demand falling, we’re going to see weak pricing rule the day.

While natural gas prices have rebounded in recent weeks to above $4 per million Btus, they fell again last week, settling right at $4 at Henry Hub but down to $3.90 on the NYMEX. And as mild weather spreads across the country, it’s likely they’ll fall below that threshold again, even as the number of natural gas rigs in operation has dropped below 400 for the first time since 1999.

Strength in numbers
Joy Global
is the world’s second largest mining-equipment manufacturer, and it relies even more so on the coal industry’s health than Caterpillar does, with two-thirds of its sales coming from coal miners. It cut several hundred jobs late last year, and in its first-quarter conference call in February, the equipment manufacturer pointed to a 27% decrease in books, as original equipment orders dropped 30% and it saw aftermarket orders cut …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Caterpillar Cuts Jobs Amid Global Slowdown

By Rich Duprey, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Heavy-equipment maker Caterpillar was one of only two stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average to not record any gains in the first quarter. With a need to align its production to global demand, it will be cutting as many as 300 jobs at one South Milwaukee factory, or 40% of its workforce that builds its mining equipment there.

That the company also begins contract negotiations next week with the United Steelworkers union that represents the workers there was lost on no one, yet the equipment maker says it’s not a negotiating tactic.

Earlier this year its fourth-quarter profits were more than cut in half, falling to $697 million from $1.5 billion, as revenues tumbled almost 7%. More damaging, though, was having to write off $580 million in goodwill related to an acquisition it made in China that went awry amid an accounting scandal. Last month it reported global retail machine sales fell 13% during a three-month period ended in February as sales in the Asia-Pacific region plummeted 26%. With fourth-quarter construction revenues down 32%, and off an average 23% everywhere else in the world, Caterpillar really has few choices but to cut jobs.

Other construction equipment makers like Deere and Joy Global have also pulled back sharply from their recent highs, with the former falling 11% and the latter down 24%. In fact, Joy Global announced its own restructuring at the end of last year that included layoffs and facility consolidation that it said would require it to take a $25 million charge this year.

With the Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing index offering up a weak outlook for the future and China‘s own economy facing a slowdown, coal demand has been slack and miners are seeing their shares sell off. The need for mining equipment is falling as result. 

Caterpillar’s stock is down 21% from its 52-week high and it trades at nine times estimates and less than its projected growth rate. It seems to me Caterpillar may prove to be a good turnaround play at this price.

Caterpillar is the market share leader in an industry in which size matters, and its quality products, extensive service network, and unparalleled brand strength combine to give it solid competitive advantages. Read all about Caterpillar’s strengths and weaknesses in The Motley Fool’s brand-new report. Just click here to access it now.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance