Farm equipment manufacturers AGCO and Alamo Group reported decreased sales in the third quarter, illustrating agriculture industry woes.
Low commodity prices and excess inventory are among the persistent challenges hampering the agriculture equipment sector. Farm capital investment fell to an all-time low in August to go along with high interest rates.
However, increased crop demand could create opportunities for agriculture equipment manufacturers, AGCO President and Chief Executive Eric Hansotia said during the company’s Nov. 5 earnings call.
“Despite the current down cycle of the agricultural industry, AGCO is well positioned to capitalize on the long-term growth in our sector,” he said. “Farmers are being asked to produce more crops with fewer acres as the world’s population grows and food security becomes increasingly more important.”
AGCO
Duluth, Ga.-based AGCO reported the following in its earnings statement:
- Net sales totaled $2.6 billion, down 24.8% year over year;
- North American retail tractor sales fell 11% YoY through the first three quarters of 2024;
- North American retail combine sales dropped 19% YoY through Q3;
- Total assets totaled $13.5 billion, down 1.1% quarter over quarter but up 19% YoY; and
- Total liabilities fell 0.4% QoQ to $9 billion, up 28.9% YoY.
AGCO attributed the sales decline to a difficult pricing environment and a 35% YoY production cut, its largest in more than a decade, Hansotia said. The company plans to continue scaling back production in response to high dealer inventory.
“Our goal is to have around three months of dealer inventory, which will likely require further reduced production in 2024 and 2025, based on the current environment,” he said.
Dealer inventories rose to nearly five months of supply in Q3. Despite aggressive production cuts, the company still anticipates supply to outweigh demand in 2025, Hansotia said.
Alamo Group
Seguin, Texas-based Alamo Group reported the following in its Oct. 31 earnings statement:
- Net sales dropped 4.4% YoY to $401.3 million;
- Industrial equipment net sales increased 22.3% YoY to $211.2 million;
- Total assets totaled $1.48 billion, down 1.6% QoQ but up 1.8% YoY; and
- Total liabilities reached $212 million, up 2.1% QoQ but down 3.3% YoY.
The increase in industrial equipment sales helped offset a 23% decline in Alamo Group’s vegetation management division, which was partly attributed to subdued residential construction, President and Chief Executive Jeff Leonard said during the company’s earnings call.
“As a result, sales of the division’s forestry and tree care products declined sharply in North America compared to the prior year third quarter, with the decline partially offset by improved sales in Europe,” he said.
Alamo Group plans to reduce prices due to low demand while reducing its workforce by roughly 10% this year, Leonard said.