Caterpillar (CAT) has had a big run. The stock is up 124% over the past year and 28% year-to-date, opening at $752.81 on Friday.
Caterpillar Inc., CAT
After the company dropped its 2025 earnings report, Bank of America moved quickly. It raised its price target on CAT from $735 to $825 and kept its Buy rating in place.
BofA’s reasoning was straightforward. CAT is seeing turbine demand from sectors well beyond data centers, which the bank said makes fears about an oversupply of turbines look less convincing.
The numbers backed that up. Caterpillar posted $67.6 billion in total revenue for 2025, a 4% year-over-year increase. Its Power & Energy segment was the standout, growing 23% to reach $9.4 billion in sales.
Q4 results were also strong. The company reported earnings per share of $5.16 for the quarter, beating the consensus estimate of $4.67. Revenue came in at $19.13 billion, topping estimates of $17.81 billion by a wide margin. That was a 17.9% jump from the same period a year earlier.
Cramer also made a pointed comment about retail investor access to the stock, saying Caterpillar’s management should be doing more to bring individual investors in — and that a great American company shouldn’t be sitting at $749.
The broader analyst picture is mixed. Sixteen analysts have a Buy rating on CAT, seven have a Hold, and one has a Sell. The consensus price target sits at $712.52, which is actually below where the stock is currently trading.
Wells Fargo raised its target to $870 with an Overweight rating. Daiwa lifted its target to $790. Jefferies set a $750 target with a Buy. Oppenheimer went to $729 with an Outperform. Morgan Stanley, on the other hand, only raised to $425 and kept an Underweight rating.
Wall Street Zen downgraded CAT from Buy to Hold on February 21st.
Not everyone is leaning in. Insider Denise C. Johnson sold 39,138 shares on February 2nd at an average price of $681.08, totaling over $26.6 million. That was a 47% reduction in her position.
Insider Bob De Lange followed on February 6th, selling 22,656 shares at $720.11 for around $16.3 million. Over the past 90 days, insiders have sold a combined $98.2 million worth of stock.
Short interest also jumped roughly 61% in February, a sign that some traders are betting on a pullback.
Institutional investors own 70.98% of CAT. Erste Asset Management increased its holdings by 32.7% in Q3, adding 33,634 shares. Norges Bank entered a new position worth over $2.1 billion in Q2.
CAT’s 52-week range runs from $267.30 to $789.81. The stock carries a P/E ratio of 40 and a market cap of $350.27 billion. Its next quarterly dividend is $1.51 per share, representing a $6.04 annualized yield of 0.8%.
The post Caterpillar (CAT) Stock: BofA Raises Price Target to $825 After Strong 2025 Earnings appeared first on CoinCentral.


