By Bob Tita 

Deere & Co. reported a 30% drop in fiscal second-quarter profit, with no end in sight this year to the severe slump in demand for farm machinery.

Deere managed to handily beat profit expectations for the quarter, as proceeds from the sale of the company's crop insurance business and the lower overhead expenses helped offset plunging income from tractors and harvesting combines. But the company slightly expanded its forecasted sales decline for the year.

Moline, Ill.-based Deere, the world's largest seller of farm equipment, dominates the market for large, high-horsepower machinery typically used in corn, wheat and soybean farming. Lower crop prices in the U.S., weaker overseas sales and the curtailment of U.S. tax incentives to encourage equipment purchases have driven down demand for farm machinery. Continued high yields from crops planted this year in the U.S. and Canada would likely push down commodity prices further and keep farmers' incomes contained, extending the slump in equipment demand into 2016.

"We're facing the deepest downturn in North American large ag equipment in 25 years," said Chief Financial Officer Rajesh Kalathur during a conference call with analysts Friday. "We're managing our inventories aggressively."

Deere has scaled back production of high-horsepower models by about 40% to whittle inventories of unsold machines. The company said it intends to continue producing equipment at volumes below retail sales levels in the industry to further push down inventories.

Deere reported a 25% drop in farm-equipment sales during the quarter to $5.8 billion, while operating profit plunged 48% to $639 million. The operating margin on farm equipment slipped to 11% from 16% a year earlier. Deere now expects full-year sales of farm machinery to decrease 24% from last year, compared with a 23% decline forecast previously. It attributed the change to unfavorable currency-exchange rates caused by a strong U.S. dollar against the value of foreign currencies.

Deere continues to forecast lower industrywide sales across nearly all its geographic markets and expanded the decline for South America, where Deere now sees sales falling by 15% to 20% this year because of difficult market conditions in Brazil. The company previously forecast a 10% to 15% decrease.

"Deere's performance in the downcycle has been good," said Rob Wertheimer, an analyst for Vertical Research Partners. "But it's going to last awhile. We don't think there's an easy way out" of the slump.

Improving results from Deere's construction and forestry equipment business blunted some of weakness in farm machinery. Second-quarter sales of construction and forestry equipment rose 2% in the quarter to $1.6 billion, while operating income surged 43% to $189 million because of higher prices and lower overhead expenses. For the year, Deer expects construction and forestry machinery sales to rise 2% after forecasting a 5% increase previously.

Revenue from Deere's financial services unit increased 14% to $653 million. Operating profit from the business rose 16% to $265 million. Deere's overhead costs fell 14% during the quarter, while research and development expenses decreased 4%.

Overall for the quarter ended April 30, the company reported a profit of $690.5 million, or $2.03 a share, down from a year-earlier profit of $980.7 million, or $2.65 a share. Profit from the quarter included $38 million from the sale of Deere's crop-insurance business. Overall revenue slid 18% to $8.2 billion. Analysts expected $1.56 in per-share profit and $7.5 billion in revenue.

Deere expects fiscal 2015 sales to fall about 19% after previously forecasting a 17% decrease. But the company improved its net income forecast to $1.9 billion from $1.8 billion, implying earnings per share of about $5.60. Analysts have been expecting $5.31 a share.

Deere's success so far at avoiding a free fall in profit is keeping some analysts and investors devoted to the company's stock, which was recently trading up 4.2% at $93.23

"Deere management [is] proactively attacking costs and defending earnings power," said Matt Arnold, an analyst for Edward D. Jones & Co. "While more tough quarters are likely, we believe the agriculture downturn is well understood."

Write to Bob Tita at robert.tita@wsj.com

Access Investor Kit for Deere & Co.

Visit http://www.companyspotlight.com/partner?cp_code=P479&isin=US2441991054

Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires

Deere (NYSE:DE)
Historical Stock Chart
From Mar 2024 to Apr 2024 Click Here for more Deere Charts.
Deere (NYSE:DE)
Historical Stock Chart
From Apr 2023 to Apr 2024 Click Here for more Deere Charts.