CNH Industrial beats profit estimates, confirms outlook despite recession fears

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: July 29, 2022

A CNH Industrial building in Turin, Italy. Photo: Reuters/ Massimo Pinca/File

Milan | Reuters – Agricultural and construction machine maker CNH Industrial CNHI.MI beat estimates on Friday with a 14 percent rise in industrial operating profit in the second quarter and confirmed its full year outlook despite bracing for a global recession.

“Whether we face a global recession in 2023 is up for debate, but we are preparing for this eventuality,” Chief Executive Scott Wine told analysts in a post-earnings call.

The Italian-American company, whose brands include Case IH, Steyr and New Holland, said adjusted earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) from industrial activities reached $654 million in the April-June period, topping a $605 million forecast in an analyst poll compiled by Reuters.

Read Also

BigIron handled about US$885 million worth of farm assets and vehicles in the 12 months ending last Sept. 30. Photo: BigIron video screengrab via YouTube

Ritchie Bros. parent to buy online auction firm BigIron

RB Global, the parent of Canadian auction firm Ritchie Bros., is further expanding its reach into the online farm auction market with a deal for Nebraska-based BigIron Auction Co.

“Pricing, volumes and favourable mix offset significant cost escalation,” Wine said.

He cautioned about “a decidedly less advantageous climate for the next several quarters” but said the group expected to meet its full-year forecast for an increase in its net sales from industrial activities of between 10-14 percent and for a free cash flow of more than $1 billion.

By 1520 GMT Milan-listed shares in the group were up 5.6 percent, among the best performers within Italy’s blue chip index .FTMIB.

Wine cited the strong U.S. dollar impacting soft commodity prices, with potential further deterioration in farmer sentiment and income, and a possible decline of European industrial demand due to the war in Ukraine, energy risks and inflation.

However, he added, there were hints the supply chain crunch was easing.

“Raw material, labour, and freight cost escalations are sadly familiar to us, but we are finally starting to see signs of their impact diminishing,” he said.

Wine also said CNH had closed this week the sale of Aerostar, the aerospace and defence solutions business of its U.S. unit Raven.

In a separate statement, Maryland-based TCOM Holdings later on Friday announced the purchase of Aerostar.

Financial details of the transaction were not disclosed.

About the author

GFM Network News

GFM Network News

Glacier FarmMedia Feed

Glacier FarmMedia, a division of Glacier Media, is Canada's largest publisher of agricultural news in print and online.

explore

Stories from our other publications