Materials handling equipment manufacturer Hyster-Yale’s dealer sales plunged in the second quarter amid economic turbulence and operational shifts.
HYG Financial Services (HYGFS), a joint venture owned 20% by Hyster-Yale and 80% by Wells Fargo Financial Leasing, received $1.4 billion in loans from Wells Fargo at the end of Q2, unchanged year over year, according to the company’s 10-Q filing today with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Hyster-Yale’s dividends from HYGFS, which provides lift truck financing for Hyster-Yale dealers and customers in the United States, rose 81.8% YoY to $8 million. Hyster-Yale’s incremental obligations to Wells Fargo, which removes receivables guaranteed from HYGFS’ loans, jumped 7.6% YoY to $262 million.
BY THE NUMBERS: Weakened demand in Q2 was a “natural reaction to the widespread economic uncertainty, causing many customers to defer capital expenditures,” Chief Executive Rajiv Prasad said during the company’s earnings call today.
Industrial sectors “often require long-term investment decisions that are sensitive to tariff volatility, interest rates and geopolitical developments,” he said.
Cleveland-based Hyster-Yale reported in Q2:
- Dealer sales for the Americas totaled $301.7 million, down 35.4% YoY;
- Direct sales for the Americas fell 6.8% YoY to $178.4 million;
- Total revenue for the Americas dropped 19.7% YoY to $707.5 million;
- Total dealer sales declined 30.6% YoY to $460.5 million;
- Total direct sales fell 7.4% YoY to $178.8 million;
- Total revenue dropped 18.1% YoY to $956.6 million; and
- A net loss of $13.9 million, down from a $63.3 million profit in Q2 2025.
Despite the results, the company saw an uptick in quoting activity and new business proposals, demonstrating “resilient underlying demand for our products,” Prasad said.
“This trend should position us favorably for production and sales rebound once macroeconomic conditions stabilize,” he said.
THE BIG PICTURE: Like other OEMs, Hyster-Yale is adjusting retail prices and production to account for tariff impacts and other economic factors, Prasad said.
“We are maintaining regular dealer communication, adjusting unit prices monthly based on actual product costs — raising prices as tariffs increase, lowering prices when tariff levels decrease — to ensure that our unit economics reflect the current environment.”
— Rajiv Prasad, CEO, Hyster-Yale
The company is seeking cost-effective supply partners so that it can make the same unit models at different locations around the world, Prasad said.
“This flexibility ultimately helps us control costs, balance production and react quickly as market conditions change,” he said.
NOTEWORTHY: Hyster-Yale renewed its $300 million credit facility in Q2, bringing several benefits including lower borrowing margins, greater covenant flexibility and a maturity extension to June 2030, Chief Financial Officer Scott Minder said during the call.
“As we balanced lower debt with reduced, but healthy, cash levels, the company maintained a strong liquidity position, increasing unused borrowing capacity by 3% to nearly $260 million at the end of Q2,” he said.
MARKET REACTION: Shares of Hyster-Yale [NYSE: HY] were down 12.4% from market open to $36.98 as of market close today. It has a market capitalization of $654.8 million.
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