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Caterpillar Just Raised Its Revenue Forecast As AI Power Demand Surges

Published Jul 13, 2026
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Big factory earnings are usually a yawn. Caterpillar just turned in one of the loudest prints of the season.

The maker of yellow building gear now sees full-year sales growth at a low double-digit pace, well above its earlier 7% call. Shares jumped 5.3% before the open.

Caterpillar gets watched closely because it sells the gear that builds real things. That makes it a real-time read on the world economy, and right now that read is strong.

The AI Power Trade Has A Hardware Bill

Data centers running AI need a lot of power, plus backup gear when the grid wobbles. Caterpillar's power unit has been selling into that boom for the last year, with sales up 22% in the quarter.

Building gear was the bigger surprise. Sales jumped 38% as dealers stocked up on gear in North America, Caterpillar's biggest market.

Adjusted profit hit $5.54 per share, up from $4.25 a year ago. That blew past the $4.62 Wall Street had penciled in.

Sales came in at $17.42 billion versus a $16.61 billion call. Both core units leaned on strong North American demand to clear the bar.

The pattern lines up with what other big factory firms have flagged this year. Power, data center, and grid spending is showing up in the numbers, not just the press releases.

CEO comments framed AI orders as a multi-year tailwind, not a one-quarter spike. That tone matched the bumped full-year guide.

Tariffs Are Still The Drag

It wasn't all good news. Higher making costs - mostly tied to tariffs on parts and gear from other countries - cost the firm $710 million in the quarter.

Tariffs are taxes on goods coming in from other places. They push up the price of raw inputs, and that hit partly offset stronger pricing and higher unit sales for the period.

Caterpillar trimmed its full-year tariff call to a range of $2.2 billion to $2.4 billion, down from $2.6 billion. Big factory firms have been some of the hardest-hit by tariff costs.

The wider economy felt it as businesses delayed spending while waiting for clarity. Caterpillar's print says some of that delay is starting to lift, mostly in North America.

What to Watch

Two stories are running side by side. AI is pushing power firms and grid owners to buy more gear fast, while building demand in North America is firmer than most thought this far into a tariff cycle.

Caterpillar sits at the crossing of both trends. That's why the guide bump matters more than the EPS beat.

The next print will show whether dealer stocking keeps going or starts to ease as the AI cycle matures. Keep an eye on the order backlog line, since that's the cleanest tell on what comes next.

The other read here is the wider economy. When dealers stock up like this, it usually means they expect strong sales for the next few quarters, not a pullback.

Most factory CEOs went into 2026 cautious. Caterpillar just gave the bulls a reason to push back on that view.

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