This Unstoppable Dividend Stock Is Up 21% in 3 Months. Here’s Why It’s Still a Great Buy in December.

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After going practically nowhere for more than three years, shares of Deere (NYSE: DE) finally blasted to a new all-time high on Nov. 25 after the company reported its fiscal fourth-quarter and 2024 results (for the periods ended Oct. 27). But Deere’s net income fell by more than 30% in fiscal 2024, and management is projecting even lower earnings in fiscal 2025.

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Here’s why Deere stock is going up while its earnings are going down, and why it remains an excellent dividend stock to buy now.

Image source: Getty Images.

Understanding the importance of expectations is an essential skill for becoming a great investor. A prime example would be Nvidia, which on Nov. 20 reported blowout third-quarter results and raised its outlook for the year. Despite that, the stock price has fallen since then because investors’ expectations for the GPU powerhouse had been even higher.

By comparison, expectations for Deere have been fairly tepid for a while. The agriculture, forestry, and construction equipment giant entered a cyclical uptrend starting in late 2020 as commodity prices for products such as corn, soybeans, and wheat soared, and capital spending among Deere’s core customers followed. Deere’s earnings catapulted higher in fiscal 2021 and fiscal 2022 before reaching an all-time high in fiscal 2023. But because Deere’s stock price rose so much in 2021, the stock failed to sustain its rally even as the company’s earnings headed higher.

DE Chart
DE data by YCharts.

In other words, Wall Street expected Deere to deliver unprecedented earnings growth, which it did. But after so much capital spending was pulled forward from future years, a slowdown was natural.

When Deere reported its fiscal 2023 results on Nov. 22, 2023, it forecast net income of $7.75 billion to $8.25 billion in fiscal 2024. Throughout the year, it reduced that estimate, and it ended up reporting $7.1 billion in net income. In its fiscal Q4 report on Nov. 21, Deere said it expects fiscal 2025 net income of $5 billion to $5.5 billion, which would amount to a 26% decline at the midpoint from fiscal 2024 and a whopping 48% decline from fiscal 2023.

However, that forecast range is still substantially above what Deere was raking in before the pandemic. And at its current market cap of about $126.5 billion, $5.25 billion in net income would result in a price-to-earnings ratio of about 24. That’s a fairly reasonable valuation for an industry-leading company that expects a second straight year of lower earnings.

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