rancar
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2002
- Messages
- 1,719
- Location
- Cambridge, New York
- Tractor
- JD425 lawn tractor; JD4710 CUT; JD JX75 Walk Behind
This Cat\'s Back -- Or Is It?
The following is an excerpt from this week's copy of Barron's from an article entitled "The Cat Comes Back -- A sleek new Caterpillar shows it can make money in good times and bad"
"...Caterpillar may be conservative, but it is not stuck in its ways. One of the toughest decisions the CEO has had to make was to exit the agricultural tractor business. But after fiddling for 10 years trying to bring new innovations to the business, Catepillar agreed to sell its Challenger line to Agco in December. Though the move received barely any attention, this was almost as momentous as Sears Roebuck doing away with its famous catalogue. Caterpillar was formed in 1925 by the merger of two makers of agricultural tractors, the Best and Holt companies. But in the end, the agricultural business represented a sliver, about 4%, of Cat's total business, and by getting out of it the company is no longer exposed to an industry for which many think there is no longer any 'up' cycle. More importantly, it's a sign of how serious management is about delivering better returns."
The agricultural industry may be in a funk, but it goes through up-down cycles like any other industry. JD has lasted for how long now? They've proven things could be done right. Same thing with Kubota. Maybe, Cat just never gave it a chance. They should have explored the compact tractor market which according to a rep I spoke with from big JD is booming. /w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif
The following is an excerpt from this week's copy of Barron's from an article entitled "The Cat Comes Back -- A sleek new Caterpillar shows it can make money in good times and bad"
"...Caterpillar may be conservative, but it is not stuck in its ways. One of the toughest decisions the CEO has had to make was to exit the agricultural tractor business. But after fiddling for 10 years trying to bring new innovations to the business, Catepillar agreed to sell its Challenger line to Agco in December. Though the move received barely any attention, this was almost as momentous as Sears Roebuck doing away with its famous catalogue. Caterpillar was formed in 1925 by the merger of two makers of agricultural tractors, the Best and Holt companies. But in the end, the agricultural business represented a sliver, about 4%, of Cat's total business, and by getting out of it the company is no longer exposed to an industry for which many think there is no longer any 'up' cycle. More importantly, it's a sign of how serious management is about delivering better returns."
The agricultural industry may be in a funk, but it goes through up-down cycles like any other industry. JD has lasted for how long now? They've proven things could be done right. Same thing with Kubota. Maybe, Cat just never gave it a chance. They should have explored the compact tractor market which according to a rep I spoke with from big JD is booming. /w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif