Caterpillar Inc.




American corporation that sells machinery, engines and financial products

















































































Caterpillar Inc.
Type
Public
Traded as


  • NYSE: CAT


  • DJIA component


  • S&P 100 component


  • S&P 500 component

Industry
Heavy equipment
Engines
Financial services
Predecessor
C. L. Best
Holt Manufacturing Company
Founded April 15, 1925; 93 years ago (1925-04-15)
California, U.S.
Headquarters
Deerfield, Illinois, U.S.
Area served
Worldwide
Key people

Jim Umpleby (Chairman & CEO)
Products
Services
Revenue
IncreaseUS$45.5 billion (2017)[1]
Operating income

IncreaseUS$4.406 billion (2017)[1]
Net income

IncreaseUS$754 million (2017)[1]
Total assets
IncreaseUS$76.962 billion (2017)[1]
Total equity
IncreaseUS$13.766 billion (2017)[1]
Number of employees
98,400 (2017)[1]
Subsidiaries
Website caterpillar.com

Footnotes / references
[2][3][4][5]

Caterpillar Inc. is an American Fortune 100 corporation which designs, develops, engineers, manufactures, markets and sells machinery, engines, financial products and insurance to customers via a worldwide dealer network. It is the world's largest construction equipment manufacturer.[2][3][6]
In 2018, Caterpillar was ranked #65 on the Fortune 500 list[7] and #238 on the Global Fortune 500 list.[8] Caterpillar stock is a component of the Dow Jones Industrial Average.[9]


Caterpillar Inc. traces its origins to the 1925 merger of the Holt Manufacturing Company and the C. L. Best Tractor Company, creating a new entity, the California-based Caterpillar Tractor Company.[10] In 1986, the company reorganized itself as a Delaware corporation under the current name, Caterpillar Inc. Caterpillar's headquarters are located in Deerfield, Illinois; it announced in January 2017 that over the course of that year it would relocate its headquarters from Peoria, Illinois, to Deerfield, Illinois, scrapping plans from 2015 of building an $800 million new headquarters complex in downtown Peoria.[11][12]


The company also licenses and markets a line of clothing and workwear boots under its Cat / Caterpillar name.[13]
Caterpillar machinery is recognizable by its trademark "Caterpillar Yellow" livery and the "CAT" logo.[14]


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Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 Origins


    • 1.2 Move to Peoria


    • 1.3 Use in World War I


    • 1.4 Post-war challenges


    • 1.5 Caterpillar company formed (1925)


    • 1.6 Expansion in developing markets


    • 1.7 Acquisitions


    • 1.8 Divestitures




  • 2 Business lines


    • 2.1 Machinery


    • 2.2 On-road trucks


    • 2.3 Engines and gas turbines


    • 2.4 Caterpillar Defense Products


    • 2.5 Caterpillar Electronics


    • 2.6 Agriculture products


    • 2.7 Financial products and brand licensing


    • 2.8 Brand licensing




  • 3 Operations


    • 3.1 Manufacturing


    • 3.2 Distribution


    • 3.3 Management


    • 3.4 Current board of directors




  • 4 Workforce and labor relations


    • 4.1 Labor practices




  • 5 Environmental record


    • 5.1 Environmental stewardship




  • 6 Controversies


    • 6.1 Clean Air Act violation


    • 6.2 Tax deferral techniques


    • 6.3 Israel Defense Force sales


    • 6.4 Spying on activists




  • 7 Advocacy, philanthropy and awards


  • 8 See also


  • 9 References


  • 10 Further reading


  • 11 External links





History




HOLT (before 1925)






Benjamin Holt, one of the founding fathers of Holt Manufacturing Company.



Origins


The steam tractors of the 1890s and early 1900s were extremely heavy, sometimes weighing 1,000 pounds (450 kg) per horsepower, and often sank into the rich, soft earth of the San Joaquin Valley Delta farmland surrounding Stockton, California. Benjamin Holt attempted to fix the problem by increasing the size and width of the wheels up to 7.5 feet (2.3 m) tall and 6 feet (1.8 m) wide, producing a tractor 46 feet (14 m) wide. But this also made the tractors increasingly complex, expensive and difficult to maintain.




Two Holt 45 gas crawler tractors team up to pull a long wagon train in the Mojave Desert during construction of the Los Angeles Aqueduct in 1909.


Another solution considered was to lay a temporary plank road ahead of the steam tractor, but this was time-consuming, expensive, and interfered with earthmoving. Holt thought of wrapping the planks around the wheels. He replaced the wheels on a 40 horsepower (30 kW) Holt steamer, No. 77, with a set of wooden tracks bolted to chains. On Thanksgiving Day, November 24, 1904, he successfully tested the updated machine plowing the soggy delta land of Roberts Island.[15]


Contemporaneously Richard Hornsby & Sons in Grantham, Lincolnshire, England, developed a steel plate tracked vehicle which it patented in 1904. This tractor steered by differential braking of the tracks and did not require the forward tiller steering wheel for steering making it the first to do so. Several tractors were made and sold to operate in the Yukon, one example of which was in operation until 1927 remnants of which still exist to this day, but Hornsby were unable to interest the British Military in 1907, although soldiers who witnessed the trials nicknamed the machine a caterpillar. Hornsby therefore found a limited market for their tractor so they sold their patent to Holt in 1911, the same year Holt trademarked "Caterpillar".


Company photographer Charles Clements was reported to have observed that the tractor crawled like a caterpillar,[16] and Holt seized on the metaphor. "Caterpillar it is. That's the name for it!"[15] Some sources, though, attribute this name to British soldiers in July 1907. Two years later Holt sold his first steam-powered tractor crawlers for US$5,500, about US$128,000 today. Each side featured a track frame measured 30 inches (760 mm) high by 42 inches (1,100 mm) wide and were 9 feet (2.7 m) long. The tracks were 3 inches (76 mm) by 4 inches (100 mm) redwood slats.[15]


Holt received the first patent for a practical continuous track for use with a tractor on December 7, 1907 for his improved "Traction Engine" ("improvement in vehicles, and especially of the traction engine class; and included endless traveling platform supports upon which the engine is carried").[17]



Move to Peoria




A postcard showing the Caterpillar Tractor Co. plant in Peoria, period 1930–1945.


On February 2, 1910,[18] Holt opened up a plant in East Peoria, Illinois, led by his nephew Pliny Holt. There Pliny met farm implement dealer Murray Baker who knew of an empty factory that had been recently built to manufacture farm implements and steam traction engines. Baker, who later became the first executive vice president of what became Caterpillar Tractor Company, wrote to Holt headquarters in Stockton and described the plant of the bankrupt Colean Manufacturing Co. of East Peoria, Illinois.
On October 25, 1909, Pliny Holt purchased the factory,[19] and immediately began operations with 12 employees.[20] Holt incorporated it as the Holt Caterpillar Company, although he did not trademark the name Caterpillar until August 2, 1910.[18]


The addition of a plant in the Midwest, despite the hefty capital needed to retool the plant, proved so profitable that only two years later the company employed 625 people and was exporting tractors to Argentina, Canada, and Mexico.[21] Tractors were built in both Stockton and East Peoria.[22][23]


On January 31, 2017, after more than 90 years of being headquartered in Peoria, Illinois, the company announced plans to move their headquarters from Peoria to Chicago, Illinois by the end of 2017. The upper echelon of executives, including newly installed CEO Jim Umpleby, will begin relocating later this year, with up to 100 employees total moving by year's end. About 300 employees will work in the new office at an as-yet undecided location once the transition is complete. The company indefinitely suspended planning for the new Peoria headquarters in the fall of 2015 after announcing a restructuring effort that called for up to 10,000 jobs to be cut and about 20 facilities around the world to be closed or consolidated. The changes contributed to $2.3 billion in savings in 2016, but sales and revenue for last year still were more than 40 percent below peak levels of 2012. Umpleby said that decline is a fundamental reason the company's Board of Directors opted to move global headquarters to an area where the global marketplace is in easier reach.[11]



Use in World War I


The first tanks used in WW1 were manufactured by William Foster & Co. also in Lincolnshire and were introduced to the battlefiled in 1916. That company had collaborated with Hornsby in the development of the vehicles demonstrated to the British military in 1907, providing the paraffin (kerosene) engines.


Holt's track-type tractors played a support role in World War I. Even before the U.S. formally entered WWI, Holt had shipped 1,200 tractors to England, France and Russia for agricultural purposes. These governments, however, sent the tractors directly to the battlefront where the military put them to work hauling artillery and supplies.[24] When World War I broke out, the British War Office ordered a Holt tractor and put it through trials at Aldershot. The War Office was suitably impressed and chose it as a gun-tractor.[25] Over the next four years, the Holt tractor became a major artillery tractor, mainly used to haul medium guns like the 6-inch howitzer, the 60-pounder, and later the 9.2-inch howitzer.[26]


Holt tractors were also the inspiration for the development of the British tank, which profoundly altered ground warfare tactics.[15][27] Major Ernest Swinton, sent to France as an army war correspondent, very soon saw the potential of a track-laying tractor.[28]:116 Although the British later chose an English firm to build its first tanks, the Holt tractor became "one of the most important military vehicles of all time."[26]




A Caterpillar D2, introduced in 1938, at the Serpentine Vintage Tractor Museum, Serpentine, Western Australia.



Post-war challenges


Holt tractors had become well known during World War I. Military contracts formed the major part of the company's production. When the war ended, Holt's planned expansion to meet the military's needs was abruptly terminated. The heavy-duty tractors needed by the military were unsuitable for farmers. The company's situation worsened when artillery tractors were returned from Europe, depressing prices for new equipment and Holt's unsold inventory of military tractors. The company struggled with the transition from wartime boom to peacetime bust. To keep the company afloat, they borrowed heavily.


C. L. Best Gas Tractor Company, formed by Clarence Leo Best in 1910 and Holt's primary competitor, had during the war received government support enabling it to supply farmers with the smaller agricultural tractors they needed.[29][30] As a result, Best had gained a considerable market advantage over Holt by war's end. Best also assumed considerable debt to allow it to continue expansion, especially production of its new Best Model 60 "Tracklayer".


Both companies were adversely impacted by the transition from a wartime to a peacetime economy, which contributed to a nationwide depression, further inhibiting sales. On December 5, 1920, 71-year-old Benjamin Holt died after a month-long illness.[30][31]



Caterpillar company formed (1925)




A 60-horsepower Caterpillar Sixty being used for road work in the Cibola National Forest, New Mexico, United States in 1931


The banks and bankers who held the company's large debt forced the Holt board of directors to accept their candidate, Thomas A. Baxter, to succeed Benjamin Holt. Baxter initially cut the large tractors from the company's product line and introduced smaller models focused on the agricultural market. When the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1921 funded a US$1 billion federal highway building program, Baxter began refocusing the company towards building road construction equipment.[19]:66 Both companies also faced fierce competition from the Fordson company.


Between 1907 and 1918, Best and Holt had spent about US$1.5 million in legal fees fighting each other in a number of contractual, trademark and patent infringement lawsuits.[32] Harry H. Fair of the bond brokerage house of Pierce, Fair & Company of San Francisco had helped to finance C. L. Best's debt and Holt shareholders approached him about their company's financial difficulty. Fair recommended that the two companies should merge. In April and May 1925, the financially stronger C. L. Best merged with the market leader Holt Caterpillar to form the Caterpillar Tractor Co.[33]


The new company was headquartered in San Leandro until 1930, when under the terms of the merger it was moved to Peoria.[20] Baxter had been removed as CEO earlier in 1925, and Clarence Leo Best assumed the title of CEO, and remained in that role until October 1951.[29]


The Caterpillar company consolidated its product lines, offering only five track-type tractors: the 2 Ton, 5 Ton, and 10 Ton from the Holt Manufacturing Company's old product line and the Caterpillar 30 and Caterpillar 60 from the C. L. Best Tractor Co.'s former product line. The 10 Ton and 5 Ton models were discontinued in 1926. In 1928, the 2 Ton was discontinued. Sales the first year were US$13 million. By 1929, sales climbed to US$52.8 million, and Caterpillar continued to grow throughout the Great Depression of the 1930s.


Caterpillar adopted the diesel engine to replace gasoline engines. During World War II, Caterpillar products found fame with the Seabees, Construction Battalions of the United States Navy, who built airfields and other facilities in the Pacific Theater of Operations. Caterpillar ranked 44th among United States corporations in the value of wartime military production contracts.[34] During the post-war construction boom, the company grew at a rapid pace and launched its first venture outside the U.S. in 1950, marking the beginning of Caterpillar's development into a multinational corporation.



Expansion in developing markets




CAT 323DL


Caterpillar built its first Russian facility in the town of Tosno, located near St. Petersburg, Russia. It was completed in 16 months, occupied in November 1999, and began fabricating machine components in 2000.[35] It had the first electrical substation built in the Leningrad Oblast since the Communist government was dissolved on December 26, 1991. The facility was built under harsh winter conditions, where the temperature was below −13 °F (−25 °C). The facility construction was managed by the Lemminkäinen Group located in Helsinki, Finland.[citation needed]


The $125M Caterpillar Suzhou, People's Republic of China facility, manufactures medium wheel loaders and motorgraders, primarily for the Asian market. The first machine was scheduled for production in March 2009. URS Ausino, in San Francisco, California, manages facility construction.[citation needed]


Caterpillar has manufactured in Brazil since 1960.[36] In 2010 the company announced plans to further expand production of backhoe and small wheel loaders with a new factory.[37]



Acquisitions


In addition to increasing sales of its core products, much of Caterpillar's growth has been through acquisitions, including:






















































































































































































































































































































Sortable table
Company or Asset Acquired
Location
Date
Acquired From
Products
Notes

Trackson
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States
1951


Traxcavators (tracked loaders) and pipelayers
"Traxcavator" became a Cat brand
Towmotor Corporation
Mentor, Ohio, United States
1965[38]

Forklifts
In 1992 became Mitsubishi Caterpillar Forklifts, a joint venture 80% owned by Mitsubishi
Pre-acquisition history

Solar Division and Turbomach Division
San Diego, California, United States
1981[39]

International Harvester Company
Industrial gas turbines
Became Solar Turbines Incorporated, a wholly owned subsidiary of Caterpillar Inc.
Balderson, Inc.
Wamego, Kansas, United States
1990[40]
Balderson, Inc.
Work Tools for Construction and Mining Equipment, e.g. buckets, blades, forks
The name of Balderson, Inc., was changed to Caterpillar Work Tools, Inc. in 1998 and remains a wholly owned subsidiary of Caterpillar Inc.
Barber-Greene Co. Inc.
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
1991[41]

Paving products
Renamed Caterpillar Paving Products

Krupp MaK Maschinenbau GmbH

Kiel, Germany
1997[42][43]
Fried. Krupp GmbH
Marine diesel engines
Renamed MaK Motoren GmbH, a wholly owned subsidiary of Caterpillar Inc. and will continue to use the MaK brand name.

Perkins Engines

Peterborough, United Kingdom
1998[44]

LucasVarity
Small diesel engines
Produces both Cat and Perkins branded engines
Kato Engineering
Mankato, Minnesota, United States
1998[45]
Rockwell Automation, Inc.
Large electrical generators

F.G. Wilson
Larne, Northern Ireland
1999[46][47]
Emerson Electric Company
Generators. Produces both Cat and Olympian branded generators
Asset swap. Emerson acquired Kato Engineering from Caterpillar as part of transaction.
Earthmoving Equipment Division
Chennai, India
2000[48]

Hindustan Motors Ltd.
Construction equipment
Renamed Caterpillar India and the service & maintenance is provided by birla group's GMMCO Ltd.
Caterpillar Elphinstone Pty. Ltd.
Burnie, Australia
2000[49]
Elphinstone Pty. Ltd.
Underground mining equipment
Acquired 50% interest in joint venture from partner Elphinstone. Renamed Caterpillar Underground Mining
Sabre Engines Ltd.
Wimborne, United Kingdom
2000[50]
Sabre Group Ltd.
Marine diesel engines
Renamed Caterpillar Marine Power UK. Produces both Cat and Perkins-Sabre branded engines
Bitelli SpA
Minerbio, Italy
2000[51]

Asphalt pavers, cold planers, compactors and other road maintenance products
Merged into Caterpillar Paving Products
Wealdstone Engineering Ltd.
Rushden, United Kingdom
2004[52]

Remanufacturer of gasoline and diesel engines
Organized under Caterpillar Remanufacturing Services
Williams Technologies, Inc.
Summerville, South Carolina, United States
2004[52]
Delco Remy International Inc.
Remanufacturer of automatic transmissions, torque converters and engines
Organized under Caterpillar Remanufacturing Services
Turbomach SA
Riazzino, Switzerland
2004[53]
Babcock Borsig AG
Packager of industrial gas turbines and related systems


Progress Rail Services
Albertville, Alabama
2006[54][55]
One Equity Partners
Supplier of railroad and transit system products and services. Owner of Electro-Motive Diesel, Inc.

Hindustan PowerPlus Ltd.
Mathagondapalli, Tamil Nadu, India
2006[56][57]
Hindustan Motors
Engine components and heavy-duty diesel engines
Buyout of joint venture formed in 1988. Renamed Caterpillar Power India Private Ltd. Merged into Caterpillar India in 2008.
Eurenov S.A.S.
Chaumont, France
2007[58][59]

Automotive component remanufacturing
Organized under Caterpillar Remanufacturing Services
Forestry Division of Blount International, Inc.
Portland, Oregon, United States
2007[58][60]
Blount International, Inc.
Timber harvesting and processing equipment, loaders and attachments

Shandong Engineering Machinery (SEM)
China
2008[61]

Wheel loaders

Lovat Inc.
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
2008[62]


Tunnel boring machines
2 April 2008: "This acquisition is Caterpillar's entry into the rapidly expanding tunnel boring machine business, and it represents an excellent strategic fit for our companies and the customers we serve around the world," – Stu Levenick, Caterpillar group president.

2 May 2013: "We continuously evaluate our strategic portfolio to ensure alignment with our long-term strategy and have concluded the tunneling business no longer fits that strategy," – Stu Levenick.
Caterpillar Tunneling Canada Corporation (CTCC) have notified employees that it will exit the business and cease production at its facilities by mid-2014.


Shin Caterpillar Mitsubishi Ltd.
Sagami & Akashi, Japan
2008[62][63]
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
Construction equipment
Joint venture since 1963, after purchase of majority renamed Caterpillar Japan Ltd.
MGE Equipamentos & Serviços Ferroviários
Diadema, São Paulo, Brazil
2008[64][65]

Railroad equipment remanufacturing
Subsidiary of Progress Rail Services
Gremada Industries, Inc.
West Fargo, North Dakota, United States
2008[66][67]
Gremada Industries, Inc.
Remanufacturing transmissions, torque converters, and final drives
Organized under Caterpillar Remanufacturing Services
Twin City Signal Inc.
Hudson, Wisconsin, United States
2008[68]

Signaling, traffic control
Division of Progress Rail Services
JCS Co., Ltd.
Yangsan City, Kyungnam, South Korea
2009[69][70]
Jinsung T.E.C. Co., Ltd.
Seal technology

GE Inspection Products
Erie, Pennsylvania, United States
2010[71]
GE Transportation
Rail inspection products
Division of Progress Rail Services
FCM Rail Ltd.
Fenton, Michigan, United States
2010[72][73]

Rail maintenance equipment leasing
Division of Progress Rail Services
Zeit Comercio e Montagem de Equipamentos Ltda
Curitiba, Parana, Brazil
2010[74]

Automation and electrical equipment for locomotives and other industries
Acquired by MGE, a division of Progress Rail Services Corporation

Electro-Motive Diesel
La Grange, Illinois, United States
2010[75]
Greenbriar Equity Group LLC, Berkshire Partners LLC, et al.
Railroad locomotives and large diesel engines
Wholly owned subsidiary of Progress Rail Services
Underground Imaging Technologies, Inc. (UIT)
Latham, New York, United States
2010[76]

Geophysical services, specializing in providing three-dimensional representations of underground utilities
Organized under Cat Advanced Systems Division
Caterpillar Xuzhou Ltd
Xuzhou, China
2010[77]

XCMG Group
Construction equipment
Joint venture since 1995, will become wholly owned subsidiary Caterpillar Xuzhou
CleanAIR Systems, Inc.
Santa Fe, New Mexico, United States
2010[78]

Customized stationary aftertreatment solutions for internal combustion engines
Wholly owned subsidiary of Caterpillar Inc. organized under Customer Services Support Division

MWM Holding GmbH
Mannheim, Germany
2010[79][80]
3i Group Plc
Gas and diesel powered generator sets
will become part of Caterpillar's Electric Power division (formerly Deutz Power Systems division of Deutz-Fahr)

Bucyrus International, Inc.
South Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States
2011[81][82]

Surface and underground mining equipment
Transaction closed without issuing new equity on July 8, 2011 in firm's largest acquisition ever, valued at $8.8 billion.

Pyroban Group Ltd
Shoreham, UK
2011[79][83]

Fire and explosion prevention solutions for engines and equipment



Divestitures


Caterpillar occasionally divests assets that do not align with its core competencies.






































































Sortable table
Asset Divested
Location
Date
Purchaser
Products
Notes
Turbomach Division of Solar Turbines Incorporated
San Diego, California, United States
1985[84]
Sunstrand Corporation

Auxiliary power units
Caterpillar's only aerospace asset, not a core competency, sold to longtime partner
Kato Engineering
Mankato, Minnesota, United States
1999[85]
Emerson Electric Company
Large electrical generators
Asset swap. Caterpillar acquired F.G. Wilson from Emerson as part of transaction.
Agricultural equipment assets
DeKalb, Illinois, United States
2002[86]
AGCO Corporation
Design, assembly and marketing of Challenger track tractors
Although founded as an agricultural equipment manufacturer, Caterpillar exited the business with this sale.
Preferred Group of Mutual Funds
not applicable
2006[87]
T. Rowe Price Group Inc.
Mutual funds
Caterpillar Investment Management Ltd. decided to exit the investment management business.
Pioneer Machinery
West Columbia, South Carolina, United States
2007[88]
Consortium of six Caterpillar dealers
Distributor of forestry equipment

ASV, Inc.
Grand Rapids, Minnesota, United States
2008[89]
Terex Minnesota, Inc.
Rubber track machines
Caterpillar formerly held 23.5% of ASV outstanding shares before supporting the purchase by Terex
Caterpillar Logistics Services
Morton, IL, United States
2012[90][91]

Platinum Equity, LLC
Logistics Services & Warehousing Solutions
Caterpillar retains a 35% equity stake. Business renamed Neovia Logistics Services LLC









































































































Historical financial data in billions of US dollars[92][93][94][95][96]
Year 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
2017
Revenue 20.51 20.19 22.81 30.31 36.34 41.52 44.96 51.32 32.37 42.59 60.14 65.88 55.66 55.18 47.01 38.54
45.46
Net Income 0.805 0.798 1.099 2.035 2.854 3.537 3.541 3.557 0.895 2.700 4.928 5.397 6.556 2.452 2.512 −0.067
0.743
Total Assets 30.49 32.71 36.71 43.10 47.07 51.45 56.13 67.78 60.04 64.02 81.22 88.83 84.76 84.50 78.34 74.70
76.96
Employees (thousands) 70.68 70.97 67.83 73.03 81.67 90.16 97.44 106.5 99.36 98.50 113.6 127.8 122.5 115.6 110.8 99.5
98.4


Business lines


Through fiscal year 2010, Caterpillar divided its products, services and technologies into three principal lines of business: machinery, engines and financial products for sale to private and governmental entities.[2] Starting in 2011, Caterpillar reports its financials using five business segments: construction industries, resource industries, power systems, financial products, and all other segments.[97]



Machinery




Cat 365B demolition machine in action



Caterpillar has a list of some 400 products for purchase through its dealer network. Caterpillar's line of machines range from tracked tractors to hydraulic excavators, backhoe loaders, motor graders, off-highway trucks, wheel loaders, agricultural tractors and locomotives. Caterpillar machinery is used in the construction, road-building, mining, forestry, energy, transportation and material-handling industries.




Caterpillar D350D articulated off-road truck


Caterpillar is the world's largest manufacturer of wheel loaders. The medium size (MWL) and large size (LWL) are designed at their Aurora, Illinois facility. Medium wheel loaders are manufactured at: Aurora, Illinois; Sagamihara, Kanagawa, Japan; Gosselies, Charleroi, Belgium; Piracicaba, São Paulo, Brazil;[98]India and the People's Republic of China. Large wheel loaders are manufactured exclusively in the United States on three separate assembly lines at Aurora, Illinois.



On-road trucks


Caterpillar began selling a line of on-road trucks in 2011, the Cat CT660, a Class 8 vocational truck.[99]
As of March 2016, Caterpillar has ceased production of on-highway vocational trucks stating that “Remaining a viable competitor in this market would require significant additional investment to develop and launch a complete portfolio of trucks, and upon an updated review, we determined there was not a sufficient market opportunity to justify the investment,” said Ramin Younessi, vice president with responsibility for Caterpillar’s Industrial Power Systems Division. “We have not yet started truck production in Victoria, and this decision allows us to exit this business before the transition occurs.”[100]



Engines and gas turbines




Twin Caterpillar 3208T engines powering Clogher Head lifeboat (Ireland)


A portion of Caterpillar's business is in the manufacturing of diesel and natural gas engines and gas turbines which, in addition to their use in the company's own vehicles, are used as the prime movers in locomotives, semi trucks, marine vessels and ships, as well as providing the power source for peak-load power plants and emergency generators.


Caterpillar 3116 engine was used up until the mid ’90s until in 1997 Caterpillar introduced the inline 6 cylinder 7.2 litre Caterpillar 3126 engine as its first electronic diesel engine for light trucks and buses.[101] Caterpillar decreased emissions and noise the next year in the 3126B version of the engine, and improved emissions further in 2002 with the 3126E which had an improved high-pressure oil pump and improved electronics.[101] In 2003 Caterpillar started selling a new version of this engine called the C7 to meet increased United States emission standards that came into effect in 2004; it had the same overall design as the 3126 version, but with improved fuel injectors and electronics which included its new Advanced Combustion Emissions Reduction Technology (ACERT) system.[101] In 2007, as ultra-low-sulfur diesel became required in North America, Caterpillar updated the C7 to use common rail fuel injectors and improved ACERT electronics.[101][102]


In June 2008, Caterpillar announced it would be exiting the on-highway diesel engine market in the United States before updated 2010 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) emission standards took effect,[103] as costly changes to the engines, which only constituted a small percentage of Caterpillar's total engine sales, would be likely.[104]


In October 2010, Caterpillar announced it would buy German engine-manufacturer MWM GmbH from 3i for $810 million.[80]



Caterpillar Defense Products


The Caterpillar Defence Products[105] subsidiary, headquartered in Shrewsbury, United Kingdom, provides diesel engines, automatic transmissions and other parts for the UK's Titan armored bridge layer, Trojan combat engineering tank, Terrier combat engineering vehicles, and tank transporters; the Romanian MLI-84 armored personnel carrier and the Swiss Piranha III light armored vehicle, which is currently being developed for use by American light armored formations; large fleets of military trucks in both the U.S. and UK; and the CV90 family of infantry fighting vehicles used by the armies of Sweden, Norway, Finland, Switzerland, the Netherlands and Denmark.


This division also provides both propulsion engines and power generation systems to the naval shipbuilding industry, such as the Series 3512B turbocharged V-12 diesel engine for American Virginia class nuclear submarines. Caterpillar diesel engines are also used in San Antonio class amphibious transport docks, Spanish Alvaro de Bazán class frigates, British River class patrol vessels, Mexican Sierra class patrol boats,[106]
and Malaysian Kedah class MEKO A-100 offshore patrol vessels.[107] The poor network security of the Caterpillar engines puts America's submarine force at risk for cyberattack.[108] In a recent interview on cybersecurity, the Navy clarified that Caterpillar actually has some of the most secure control systems and will be used as a model of how the Navy will design cyber protections into its control systems.[109]





IDF Caterpillar D9 armored bulldozer


Israel buys bulldozers for the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) from Caterpillar through the U.S. government foreign aid money in their civilian configuration. The military modifications and the installment of vehicle armor are done entirely in Israel by the IDF and Israeli security contractors (Israel Military Industries and Israel Aerospace Industries).[citation needed] The IDF uses many Caterpillar machines such as bulldozers, excavators, wheel loaders and graders mainly for engineering, earthworks and building projects. The most famous machine in use by the IDF's Combat Engineering Corps is the heavy IDF Caterpillar D9 armored bulldozer, which is being used also for combat engineering and combat missions under fire.


The Israel Defense Forces' use of highly modified Caterpillar D9 bulldozers has led to Caterpillar being criticized by activists and some shareholders.[110][111] In particular, the IDF Caterpillar D9 was involved in an incident in 2003, in which the American activist Rachel Corrie was killed by a bulldozer. A lawsuit against Caterpillar by her family and families of Palestinians, who were also killed by Caterpillar equipment, was unsuccessful.[112][113] A lawsuit against Israel and Israeli Defense Ministry was rejected by the court, ruling that her death was an accident, caused by restricted field of view from the heavily armored operators' cabin.[114] In 2014 Presbyterian Church (USA) sold its shares in Caterpillar citing the use of Caterpillar bulldozers involved in demolition and surveillance activities in the West Bank.[115][116]



Caterpillar Electronics


The Caterpillar Electronics business unit has formed Caterpillar Trimble Control Technologies LLC (CTCT), a 50:50 joint venture with Trimble Navigation to develop electronic guidance and control products for earthmoving machines in the construction, mining and waste industries. CTCT is based in Dayton, Ohio and started its operations on April 1, 2002.



Agriculture products


Caterpillar introduced the Challenger range of agricultural tractors as the result of several development programs over a long period of time. The program started in the 1970s and involved both D6-based units and Grader power units. A parallel program was also developing wheeled high hp tractors based on using the articulated loading shovel chassis was latter merged with the crawler team. The result was the Challenger Tractor and the "Mobi-Trac" system.


The Challenger has been marketed in Europe as Claas machines since 1997, with Caterpillar marketing the Claas built Lexion combine range in the USA. Claas and Caterpillar formed a joint venture, Claas Omaha, to build combine harvesters in Omaha, Nebraska, USA under the CAT brand. In 2002, Cat sold its stake to Claas, and licensed the use of CAT and the CAT yellow livery to Claas. They are marketed as Lexion combines now.


Also in 2002, Caterpillar sold the Challenger tracked tractor business to AGCO and licensed the use of the Challenger and CAT names and livery to them. This ended Cat's venture into agriculture.



Financial products and brand licensing


Caterpillar provides financing and insurance to customers via its worldwide dealer network [2] and generates income through the licensing of the Caterpillar and CAT trademarks and logos.



Brand licensing




Caterpillar-branded work boots manufactured by Wolverine World Wide


Caterpillar sells the right to manufacture, market and sell products bearing the Cat trademark to licensees worldwide. Wolverine World Wide is one example, a licensee since 1994 and currently the sole company licensed to produce Cat branded footwear.[117] Other licensees sell items including scale models of Cat products, clothing, hats, luggage, watches, flashlights, shovels, knives, fans, gloves, smartphones[118] and other consumer products.[119][120]



Operations



Manufacturing


Caterpillar products and components are manufactured in 110 facilities worldwide. 51 plants are located in the United States and 59 overseas plants are located in Australia (until 2015), Belgium, Brazil, Canada, China, Czech Republic, England, France, Germany, Hungary, India (Chennai), Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, Northern Ireland, Poland, Russia, Singapore, South Africa and Sweden.


Caterpillar's historical manufacturing home is in Peoria, Illinois, which also has been the location of Caterpillar's world headquarters and core research and development activities. Although Caterpillar has contracted much of its local parts production and warehousing to third parties, Caterpillar still has four major plants in the Peoria area: the Mapleton Foundry, where diesel engine blocks and other large parts are cast; the East Peoria factory, which has assembled Caterpillar tractors for over 70 years; the Mossville engine plant, built after World War II; and the Morton parts facility.


Major facilities in Europe:



  • Belgium: Gosselies (1965): Hydraulic Excavators, Medium Wheel Loaders, components (factory closed in 2016)

  • France: Grenoble and Échirolles (1961): Track Type Tractors, Track Type Loaders, Wheeled Excavators, Undercarriage components

  • Hungary: Gödöllő: Fabrications, Buckets

  • Italy: Minerbio: Paving Products

  • Poland: Sosnowiec and Janów Lubelski: Fabrications

  • Russia: Tosno: Fabrications

  • UK: Leicester: Mini-excavators; Peterlee: Articulated Dump Trucks; Peterborough: Engines; NI: Gensets



Distribution


Caterpillar products are distributed to end-users in nearly 200 countries through Caterpillar's worldwide network of 220 dealers. Caterpillar's dealers are independently owned and operated businesses with exclusive geographical territories. Dealers provide sales, maintenance and repair services, rental equipment, and parts distribution. Finning, a dealer based in Vancouver, Canada, is Caterpillar's largest global distributor.[121]Gmmco Ltd is India's No. 1 Dealer for Caterpillar Machines.[122]


Most dealers use a management system called DBS for their day-to-day operations.


As of the first quarter of 2006, 66% of Caterpillars sales are made by one of the 63 dealers in the United States, with the remaining 34% sold by one of Caterpillar's 157 overseas dealers.[citation needed]



Management


Caterpillar has a corporate governance structure where the Chairman of the board also acts as Chief Executive Officer (CEO). The Board of Directors is fully independent and is made up of non-employee directors selected from outside the company. Several group presidents report to the CEO, and multiple vice presidents report to each group president.


The board has three committees: Audit; Compensation and Human Resources; Governance and Public Policy[123].


The behavior of all employees is governed by a Code of Worldwide Business Conduct, first published in 1974 and last amended in 2005, which sets the corporate standard for honesty and ethical behavior. Management employees are retested on this code annually.



Current board of directors


As of December 2018[124], the board of directors was composed as follows:[125]











On January 1, 2017, Jim Umpleby succeeded Douglas R. Oberhelman as CEO and Dave Calhoun became Non-Executive Chairman.[126] On December 12, 2018, Umpleby was named chairman of the board as well, reversing Caterpillar's previous decision to split the CEO and chairman position.[127]



Workforce and labor relations


As of December 31, 2009, Caterpillar employed 93,813 persons of whom 50,562 are located outside the United States. Current employment figures represent a decline of 17,900 employees compared the third quarter of 2008.[3] Due to the restructuring of business operations which began in the 1990s, there are 20,000 fewer union jobs in the Peoria, Illinois area while employment outside the U.S. has increased.[citation needed]



Labor practices


Caterpillar came close to bankruptcy in the early 1980s, at one point losing almost US$1 million per day due to a sharp downturn in product demand as competition with Japanese rival Komatsu increased. (At the time, Komatsu used the internal slogan "encircle Caterpillar".)[128] Caterpillar suffered further when the United States declared an embargo against the Soviet Union after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, causing the company to be unable to sell US$400 million worth of pipelaying machinery that had already been built.[129]


Due to the drastic drop in demand, Caterpillar initiated employee layoffs, which led to strikes, primarily by the members of the United Auto Workers, against Caterpillar facilities in Illinois and Pennsylvania. Several news reports at the time indicated that products were piling up so high in facilities that replacement workers could barely make their way to their work stations.


In 1992, the United Auto Workers conducted a five-month strike against Caterpillar. In response, Caterpillar threatened to replace Caterpillar's entire unionized work force. Over ten thousand UAW members struck again in 1994–1995 for 17 months, a record at that time. The strike ended with the UAW deciding to return to work without a contract despite record revenues and profits by Caterpillar.[130] In 1994, Caterpillar offered a contract to the UAW members that would have raised the salary of top workers from $35,000 to $39,000 per year. However, the UAW was seeking the same top wage of $40,000 that was paid to workers at Deere & Company in 1994.[131]


During the strikes, Caterpillar used management employees in an attempt to maintain production. It suspended research and development work, sending thousands of engineers and other non-bargained for employees into their manufacturing and assembly facilities to replace striking or locked out union members.


Rather than continuing to fight the United Auto Workers, Caterpillar chose to make itself less vulnerable to the traditional bargaining tactics of organized labor. One way was by outsourcing much of their parts production and warehouse work to outside firms. In another move, according to UAW officials and industry analysts, Caterpillar began to execute a "southern strategy".[132] This involved opening new, smaller plants, termed "focus facilities", in right-to-work states. Caterpillar opened these new facilities in Clayton and Sanford, North Carolina; Greenville, South Carolina; Corinth, Mississippi; Dyersburg, Tennessee; Griffin and LaGrange, Georgia; Seguin, Texas; and North Little Rock, Arkansas.


In 2012, the company locked out workers at a locomotive plant in London, Ontario, Canada and demanded some accept up to a 50% cut in pay, in order to become cost-competitive with comparable Caterpillar manufacturing facilities in the United States.[133] The move created controversy in Canada, with some complaining the plant was acquired under false pretenses.[134] Retail store Mark's Work Wearhouse began pulling Caterpillar boots from its shelves as a result.[135]


On May 1, 2012, 780 members of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers Local Lodge 851 went on strike. An agreement was reached in August, resulting in a 6-year wage freeze. Striking workers expressed anger about the freeze given the company's record 2011 profits and CEO Oberhelman's 60% salary increase.[136]



Environmental record



Environmental stewardship


Caterpillar divisions have won Illinois Governor's Pollution Prevention Awards every year since 1997.[137] Caterpillar was awarded the 2007 Illinois Governor's Pollution Prevention Award for three projects: The Hydraulics and Hydraulic Systems business unit in Joliet implemented a flame sprayed coating for its truck suspension system, replacing a chroming process, reducing hazardous waste by 700,000 pounds annually and saving 14 million US gallons (53,000 m3) of water. Caterpillar's Cast Metals Organization in Mapleton worked with the American Foundry Society to help produce a rule to reduce hazardous waste in scrap metal that meet strict quality requirements, and also allow foundries to continue recycling certain types of scrap and maintain a competitive cost structure. Caterpillar's Mossville Engine Center formed a team to look at used oil reuse and recycle processes that forced MEC to send large amounts of used oil off-site for recycling, and developed an updated system for reclaiming it for reuse on-site. The resulting benefits included a usage reduction of about 208,000 US gallons (790 m3) of oil per year.[138]


Caterpillar in 2004 participated in initiatives such as the United States Environmental Protection Agency's National Clean Diesel Campaign program, which encourages retrofitting fleets of older buses and trucks with newer diesel engines that meet higher emissions standards.[139][140]


In 2005, Caterpillar donated $12 million to The Nature Conservancy in a joint effort to protect and preserve river systems in Brazil, U.S.A., and China.[141]


Caterpillar has, for many years, been a member of the World Business Council for Sustainable Development based in Geneva, Switzerland[142] and has been listed on the Dow Jones Sustainability World Index each year since 2001.[143]



Controversies



Clean Air Act violation


In July 1999, Caterpillar and five other diesel engine manufacturers signed a consent decree with the Justice Department and the State of California, after governmental investigations revealed violations of the Clean Air Act. The violation involves over a million diesel engines sold with defeat devices, devices that regulated emissions during pre-sale tests, but that could be disabled in favor of better performance during subsequent highway driving. Consequently, these engines "...emit up to triple the permissible level of smog-forming nitrogen oxides (NOx). In 1998 alone, these violating vehicles emitted 1.3 million tons of additional NOx – an amount equal to the emissions of 65 million cars." For this reason, Caterpillar was named the "Clean Air Villain of the Month" for August 2000 by the Clean Air Trust.[144] The consent decree provided that $83 million be paid in civil penalties and determined new deadlines for meeting emissions standards. Caterpillar, however, was successful in lobbying for an extension of deadlines they considered too severe. Even so, in October 2002, Caterpillar – the only diesel engine company (of those that signed decrees) to fail to meet the new emissions standards deadline – was forced to pay $128 million in per-engine non-conformance penalties.[145]



Tax deferral techniques


In March 2017, when US federal agents raided Caterpillar's headquarters in Peoria Ill., it was already evident that the company engaged in aggressive measures to control tax costs. Since April 2014, the company's tax policies have been investigated by a senate subcommittee headed by Senator Carl Levin. Those investigations uncovered significant changes in Caterpillar's offshore tax strategy, culminating in the creation of the new Swiss subsidiary Caterpillar SARL (CSARL) in Geneva. In 1999, the former Caterpillar executive Daniel Schlicksup accused the company of funneling profits from replacement parts to Switzerland where it had no warehouses or factories. The Internal Revenue Service found the firm liable for a billion dollars of unpaid taxes for the years 2007 to 2009.[146]


At the same time, the architect of Caterpillar's fiscal strategy, PricewaterhouseCoopers (PWC) came also under scrutiny, owing this to a conflict of interest, acting as Caterpillar's global tax consultant and controller.[147] The Senate uncovered documents from PWC saying the elaborate move was simply a way to evade American taxes. "We are going to have to do some dancing" one said. Another noted, "What the heck, we will all be retired when this comes up on audit."[146]



Israel Defense Force sales


In 2004 the Office of the UN High Commissioner on Human Rights sent a warning letter to the company about its sales of bulldozers to the Israel Defense Force and which were used in part to destroy Palestinian farms.[148][149]



Spying on activists


In 2003, pro-Palestinian activist Rachel Corrie was crushed to death by an Israeli Defense Force-operated Caterpillar bulldozer. The company was sued by her family afterwards, and even though the company did not respond to an offer by the family to an open dialogue after the lawsuit was dismissed, a spy from C2i was sent by them to gather information about her. This was not known until 2017 when related documents were leaked.[150]



Advocacy, philanthropy and awards


Caterpillar is a leading member of the U.S. Global Leadership Coalition, a Washington D.C.-based coalition of over 400 major companies and NGOs that advocates for increased funding of American diplomatic and development efforts abroad through the International Affairs Budget.[151] Economic development projects in developing countries (particularly in rural, agricultural regions) serve as new markets for Caterpillar products by improving political and economic stability and raising average incomes.
2011 recipient of the Henry C. Turner Prize for Innovation in Construction Technology from the National Building Museum.



See also





  • G-numbers for U.S. Army Caterpillar tractors

  • List of Caterpillar machines

  • List of trucks



References





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Further reading


  • Orlemann, Eric C. Caterpillar Chronicle, The History of the World's Greatest Earthmovers. Minneapolis, MN: MBI Publishing Company, 2000.
    ISBN 978-0-7603-3673-1


External links








  • NYSE: CAT

  • Official website


    • Business data for Caterpillar: Google Finance

    • Yahoo! Finance

    • Reuters

    • SEC filings


  • Cat Products Official Website

  • Caterpillar Inc SEC Filings

  • Antique Caterpillar Machinery Owners Club

  • Antique Caterpillar Machinery Enthusiasts

  • Photos of early Holt machinery

  • Caterpillar Tractor Company Photograph Collection at Baker Library Historical Collections, Harvard Business School














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