Deere (DE) Stock Drops 3% Despite Q2 Earnings Beat Amid Farm Sector Weakness

Table of Contents Shares of Deere (DE) retreated approximately 3.2% during premarket trading Thursday, falling to $542, despite the agricultural and construction equipment manufacturer delivering second-quarter financial results that exceeded Wall Street expectations. Deere & Company, DE The Illinois-based machinery giant posted earnings per share of $6.55 for its fiscal quarter ending May 3, 2026. This figure exceeded analyst consensus estimates of $5.70 per share. Revenue totaled $13.37 billion, marking a 5% year-over-year improvement and surpassing the $12.73 billion forecast from Wall Street analysts. Quarterly net income stood at $1.77 billion, slightly below the prior year’s $1.8 billion. $DE Q2 REPORT RECAP: • EPS $6.55 vs $5.74 est• Revenue $13.37B vs $11.5B est• Sales +4.8% y/y Deere also forecast FY26 net income of $4.5B-$5.0B, while projecting strength in Construction & Forestry and Small Ag & Turf segments. https://t.co/ASNHPg5BNu — Schaeffer's Investment Research (@schaeffers) May 21, 2026 The stronger-than-anticipated results failed to reassure market participants. Lingering concerns about the agricultural sector’s financial health drove the negative market response. The company’s performance was bolstered by exceptional results from its construction and forestry division, where revenue climbed 29% to reach $3.79 billion. This segment’s operating profit soared 48% to $561 million, supported by increased shipment volumes and favorable pricing dynamics. The small agriculture and turf equipment segment also demonstrated resilience, recording a 16% revenue gain to $3.49 billion, accompanied by a 25% operating profit increase. The primary area of concern centered on Deere’s largest business unit. The production and precision agriculture division — encompassing large farming machinery — experienced a 14% revenue contraction to $4.5 billion. Operating profit plunged 39% to $706 million as reduced sales volumes and elevated manufacturing expenses compressed margins. The company anticipates industry-wide large agriculture equipment volumes to decline between 15% and 20% throughout the complete fiscal year. Agricultural producers face mounting economic pressures. Fertilizer costs have escalated following hostilities with Iran, as fertilizer production heavily relies on petroleum and natural gas inputs. While benchmark corn prices have increased to approximately $4.70 per bushel from $4.40 at 2025’s close, these gains haven’t adequately compensated for rising operational expenses. According to USDA statistics, total U.S. agricultural income for 2026 stands at roughly $153 billion — essentially unchanged from 2025 levels and significantly below the $182 billion peak achieved in 2022. Stagnant income conditions discourage substantial equipment investments. Deere preserved its full-year net income projection within the $4.5 billion to $5 billion range. The company elevated its construction and forestry division sales growth expectation to approximately 20%, up from the previous 15% forecast. Projections for small agriculture expansion (roughly 15%) and large agriculture contraction (5% to 10%) remained unrevised. Chief Executive John May emphasized the company’s diversified business model as protection against sector-specific challenges. The stock faced headwinds preceding the earnings announcement. DE shares had declined roughly 11% since the Iran conflict commenced, which elevated crude oil prices and intensified cost pressures for agricultural producers. Competitors AGCO and CNH had previously released March-quarter financial results. AGCO exceeded estimates and upgraded guidance — yet its stock fell 5.6%. CNH similarly beat expectations and affirmed guidance — its shares gained 6.3%. In February 2026, Deere completed its $439 million purchase of Tenna LLC, a construction equipment monitoring company now integrated into the construction and forestry business segment. Options market pricing indicated an anticipated post-earnings stock movement of approximately 5% in either direction.