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Caterpillar Inc. (CAT) has agreed to buy Australia’s RPMGlobal for A$1.1 billion ($732 million) in a bid to bolster its mining solutions offering.
The U.S. industrial major has agreed to pay A$5 per share for RPM, representing a premium of nearly 33% compared to its closing price on Aug. 28 before Caterpillar came out with a non-binding merger proposal.
Retail sentiment on Stocktwits about Caterpillar was in the ‘bullish’ territory at the time of writing.
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“Caterpillar’s global reach and resources will provide an enhanced platform for RPM’s products, customers, and employees to continue to thrive,” RPM Global Chair Stephen Baldwin said in a statement.
The Brisbane-based RPM provides enterprise-wide software for everything from planning and scheduling to asset management for miners. In fiscal 2025, RPM generated A$76.7 million in revenue. The move comes at a time when mining firms are increasingly leaning toward automation to trim costs amid a shortage of skilled workers in the industry.
The deal, which will likely attract scrutiny from Australia’s foreign investment regulator, is expected to close in the first quarter of 2026.
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Caterpillar’s stock has gained 34.3% this year, outperforming the benchmark S&P 500 and Nasdaq indices. The world's largest mining and construction equipment maker is scheduled to post third-quarter earnings in the coming weeks.
According to Fiscal.ai data, the industrial heavyweight is expected to post earnings of $4.54 per share for the quarter ended Sept. 30. Last week, Truist analysts wrote in a broader sector note that machinery is facing risk to margins in the second half relative to the first half, as tariff impact will likely show up fully.
The company projected a net impact of between $1.3 billion and $1.5 billion from tariffs in August.
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