S&P 500   5,072.85 (+0.22%)
DOW   37,937.90 (+0.54%)
QQQ   432.43 (+0.32%)
AAPL   169.67 (-1.75%)
MSFT   416.22 (+0.62%)
META   501.57 (+0.27%)
GOOGL   154.94 (+0.05%)
AMZN   183.81 (+0.10%)
TSLA   156.61 (-3.02%)
NVDA   877.45 (+2.03%)
AMD   163.57 (+2.03%)
NIO   3.85 (-1.03%)
BABA   69.98 (-0.91%)
T   16.06 (-1.11%)
F   12.19 (-0.33%)
MU   121.98 (+0.50%)
GE   156.80 (+2.02%)
CGC   6.80 (-2.58%)
DIS   114.02 (+0.95%)
AMC   2.77 (+12.15%)
PFE   25.79 (-0.46%)
PYPL   63.74 (+0.36%)
XOM   119.13 (-0.46%)
S&P 500   5,072.85 (+0.22%)
DOW   37,937.90 (+0.54%)
QQQ   432.43 (+0.32%)
AAPL   169.67 (-1.75%)
MSFT   416.22 (+0.62%)
META   501.57 (+0.27%)
GOOGL   154.94 (+0.05%)
AMZN   183.81 (+0.10%)
TSLA   156.61 (-3.02%)
NVDA   877.45 (+2.03%)
AMD   163.57 (+2.03%)
NIO   3.85 (-1.03%)
BABA   69.98 (-0.91%)
T   16.06 (-1.11%)
F   12.19 (-0.33%)
MU   121.98 (+0.50%)
GE   156.80 (+2.02%)
CGC   6.80 (-2.58%)
DIS   114.02 (+0.95%)
AMC   2.77 (+12.15%)
PFE   25.79 (-0.46%)
PYPL   63.74 (+0.36%)
XOM   119.13 (-0.46%)
S&P 500   5,072.85 (+0.22%)
DOW   37,937.90 (+0.54%)
QQQ   432.43 (+0.32%)
AAPL   169.67 (-1.75%)
MSFT   416.22 (+0.62%)
META   501.57 (+0.27%)
GOOGL   154.94 (+0.05%)
AMZN   183.81 (+0.10%)
TSLA   156.61 (-3.02%)
NVDA   877.45 (+2.03%)
AMD   163.57 (+2.03%)
NIO   3.85 (-1.03%)
BABA   69.98 (-0.91%)
T   16.06 (-1.11%)
F   12.19 (-0.33%)
MU   121.98 (+0.50%)
GE   156.80 (+2.02%)
CGC   6.80 (-2.58%)
DIS   114.02 (+0.95%)
AMC   2.77 (+12.15%)
PFE   25.79 (-0.46%)
PYPL   63.74 (+0.36%)
XOM   119.13 (-0.46%)
S&P 500   5,072.85 (+0.22%)
DOW   37,937.90 (+0.54%)
QQQ   432.43 (+0.32%)
AAPL   169.67 (-1.75%)
MSFT   416.22 (+0.62%)
META   501.57 (+0.27%)
GOOGL   154.94 (+0.05%)
AMZN   183.81 (+0.10%)
TSLA   156.61 (-3.02%)
NVDA   877.45 (+2.03%)
AMD   163.57 (+2.03%)
NIO   3.85 (-1.03%)
BABA   69.98 (-0.91%)
T   16.06 (-1.11%)
F   12.19 (-0.33%)
MU   121.98 (+0.50%)
GE   156.80 (+2.02%)
CGC   6.80 (-2.58%)
DIS   114.02 (+0.95%)
AMC   2.77 (+12.15%)
PFE   25.79 (-0.46%)
PYPL   63.74 (+0.36%)
XOM   119.13 (-0.46%)

Are Caterpillar and Deere Setting Up to Rally in 2023?

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Key Points

  • Caterpillar advanced 41.28% in the past three months and 19.16% year-to-date.
  • That’s ahead of the S&P 500’s gain of 2.47% in the past three months and its decline of 18.68% year-to-date. 
  • Meanwhile, Deere is up 26.57% in the past three months and 29.76% year-to-date.
  • 5 stocks we like better than Caterpillar

heavy equipment stocks

You may think of equipment makers Caterpillar Inc. NYSE: CAT and Deere & Company NYSE: DE as literally moving slowly, but these heavy equipment stocks outran the S&P 500 throughout 2022 and pulled into a sprint to end the year.

Despite its name, Caterpillar hasn’t exactly been crawling. The stock advanced 41.28% in the past three months and 19.16% year-to-date. That’s quite a difference from the S&P 500’s gain of 2.47% in the past three months and its decline of 18.68% year-to-date. 

Meanwhile, Deere is up 26.57% in the past three months and 29.76% year-to-date.

Are Caterpillar & Deere Setting Up To Rally In 2023?

A comparison with the S&P 500 is apt, as both stocks are components of the large-cap domestic index.

On Wednesday, Caterpillar cleared a buy point north of $239.85 in heavier-than-normal trading volume. The only company-specific news was the appointment of current vice president Lou Balmer-Millar as chief sustainability officer, which by itself isn’t likely to boost share prices.

However, the move underscores Caterpillar’s, as well as its industry’s, focus on technological advancement. For example, last week, the company said it would collaborate with longtime customer Luck Stone, the nation’s largest producer of crushed stone, to deploy autonomous technologies at a plant in Virginia. 

Caterpillar already operates a fleet of autonomous trucks; the new partnership will expand that initiative into applications beyond mining. Caterpillar will implement its existing autonomous MineStar Command for Hauling system at a Luck Stone quarry, using a fleet of 777G trucks. The aim is to gather data on quarry operations to further develop the next generation of autonomous solutions specific to quarry and related applications. 

The stock broke out of a constructive first-stage cup base in November. That base corrected 32% and undercut the previous structure low, which can often begin a setup for the next round of price gains. 

After that, Caterpillar began forming a flat base that corrected 8%. That’s the base the stock cleared on Wednesday. Shares gapped down at the open Thursday, as the broader market also pulled back. Even so, Caterpillar is showing technical strength as a market-beating stock that is well-positioned for a potential rally in the not-so-distant future.

Are Caterpillar & Deere Setting Up To Rally In 2023?

At Long Last, Infrastructure Spending Boost? 

A factor that could boost Caterpillar and Deere is the highly touted infrastructure bill. While investors and especially media pundits have been anticipating for more than a year to see certain sectors take off due to infrastructure spending, those expectations may finally come to fruition in 2023. 


As municipalities set their fiscal 2023 budgets, more items pertaining to infrastructure spending will result in projects that could require heavy equipment. 

On November 8, Deere cleared a cup-with-handle base with a buy point just above $402. Shares traveled higher along their 10-day moving average until gapping up 5% on November 23, following the company’s better-than-expected fourth-quarter earnings report

Increased Outlook for 2023

In the fourth quarter, the company earned $7.44 per share on revenue of $15.5 billion, increases of 81% and 37%, respectively. 

Deere also leaped on its increased fiscal 2023 outlook, which also exceeded analysts’ views. The company now sees earnings increasing 11.4%, to $25.92 per share, up from previous forecasts. 

Analysts expect the company to earn $27.86 per share in fiscal 2023, which would be a gain of 20%. In 2024, it may rise another 5% to $29.24 per share.

In the report, CEO John May specifically addressed the potential of increased infrastructure spending. “Deere is looking forward to another strong year in 2023 based on positive farm fundamentals and fleet dynamics, as well as an increased investment in infrastructure," he said in a statement.

Deere has been trading in a sideways pattern since its November gap higher. That’s a good sign, as it indicates investors are holding shares and supporting the price at a particular level. A sideways or flat pattern is often a setup for a further rally, as the stock takes a breather while investors hold onto prior gains.

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Should you invest $1,000 in Caterpillar right now?

Before you consider Caterpillar, you'll want to hear this.

MarketBeat keeps track of Wall Street's top-rated and best performing research analysts and the stocks they recommend to their clients on a daily basis. MarketBeat has identified the five stocks that top analysts are quietly whispering to their clients to buy now before the broader market catches on... and Caterpillar wasn't on the list.

While Caterpillar currently has a "Hold" rating among analysts, top-rated analysts believe these five stocks are better buys.

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Companies Mentioned in This Article

CompanyMarketRank™Current PricePrice ChangeDividend YieldP/E RatioConsensus RatingConsensus Price Target
Caterpillar (CAT)
4.6975 of 5 stars
$361.88-0.6%1.44%17.97Hold$301.94
Deere & Company (DE)
3.5181 of 5 stars
$394.59+0.2%1.49%11.49Moderate Buy$433.28
Compare These Stocks  Add These Stocks to My Watchlist 

Kate Stalter

About Kate Stalter

  • stalterkate@gmail.com

Contributing Author

Retirement, Asset Allocation, and Tax Strategies

Experience

Kate Stalter has been a contributing writer for MarketBeat since 2021.

Additional Experience

Series 65-licensed investment advisor, financial advisor, Blue Marlin Advisors; investment columnist for Forbes, U.S. News & World Report

Areas of Expertise

Asset allocation, technical and fundamental analysis, retirement strategies, income generation, risk management, sector and industry analysis

Education

Bachelor of Arts, Saint Mary’s College, Notre Dame, Indiana; Master of Business Adminstration, Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University

Past Experience

Founder, financial advisor for Better Money Decisions; editor, stock trading instructor for Investor’s Business Daily; columnist, podcast host, video host for MoneyShow.com; contributor for Morningstar magazine


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