Why investors should buy Deere, avoid Caterpillar

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In the latest edition of Good Buy or Goodbye, Barron's Senior Writer Al Root joins Yahoo Finance Live to analyze cyclical stocks Deere & Co. (DE) and Caterpillar (CAT).

Root names Deere a buy though "farmers are not doing as well as they were," with total income down $70 billion from it's peak. Despite "less spending on farm equipment," Root stresses being near a trough favors cyclicals. Root acknowledges Deere plans to invest in precision farming, including "self-driving tractors" and "computers planting seeds" for cost savings, and that the company hopes to eventually reach 10% it's of sales from software sales, up from 1% currently. With an attractive valuation, Root sees positives in this stock for investors.

However, he says avoid Caterpillar amid "new equipment erosion," nothing that the "slowing of orders" at one dealer "indicates that maybe the cycle is turning for them." Already "operating right at the peak" for non-residential construction, Root expects a downturn to a come.

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

Editor's note: This article was written by Angel Smith

Video Transcript

[MUSIC PLAYING]

JULIE HYMAN: It's a big noisy universe of stocks out there. Welcome to "Good Buy or Goodbye," our goal to help cut through that noise to navigate the best moves for your portfolio. Today we're taking a look at two major American machine makers. Joining me here with how to play these cyclical stocks is Al Root, Barron's Senior Writer. Good to see you. Thanks for coming in.

AL ROOT: Thanks, Julie.

JULIE HYMAN: So let's get to your buy stock, first of all. And it is Deere, the farm equipment giant. Of course, when you're talking about Deere, a lot of what you talk about has to do with the farming cycle, right, and the income that farmers are bringing in and how much they're willing to spend. So where are we in that cycle? You think close to a bottom maybe.

AL ROOT: Well, you hit on it. These are two cyclical companies. And at this point, farmers are not doing as well as they were. Corn prices are down about 35% to 40% year-over-year. Farm income is projected in 24 by our great USDA to be about $115 billion. That's down from two years ago from a peak of about $185 billion. So that means less spending on farm equipment and things like that. But when you're getting close to a trough, that, of course, is a good thing for cyclical stocks.

JULIE HYMAN: One of the interesting things that's been happening in farming, too, is a lot of technology being brought into the industry with what's called precision farming. How is Deere sort benefiting from that?