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what it is
Alamo sells the machines cities, contractors, and farms use to mow roadsides, clear brush, and maintain infrastructure.
how it gets paid
Last year Alamo made $1.6B in revenue. vegetation management equipment was the main engine at $0.72B, or 45% of sales.
why growth slowed
FY2025 net sales ~$1,603.7M (−1.5% YoY). Management raised the dividend in early 2026—pair that capital-return signal with vegetation-management softness vs. industrial strength.
what just happened
Q4 2025: net sales ~$373.7M; GAAP diluted EPS ~$1.28; adjusted diluted EPS ~$1.70—both missed elevated consensus (~$2.06 GAAP in recap) on weaker mix.
At a glance
B++ balance sheet — above average — nothing keeping you up at night
75/100 earnings predictability — reasonably predictable
19.9x trailing p/e — priced about right
0.8% dividend yield — cash in your pocket every quarter
13.0% return on capital — nothing to write home about
xvary composite: 69/100 — average
What they do
Alamo sells the machines cities, contractors, and farms use to mow roadsides, clear brush, and maintain infrastructure.
This is not a flashy business. It is a replacement-cycle business with 29 plants and a dealer network that keeps equipment in the field across North America, Europe, Australia, and Brazil. When your county needs a mower or chipper fixed fast, the nearby dealer matters more than a slick slide deck.
industrials
mid-cap
equipment-maker
infrastructure
dealer-network
How they make money
~$1.60B
FY2025 net sales · −1.5% YoY (company release)
vegetation management equipment
$0.72B
13.2%
industrial equipment
$0.49B
+8.0%
agricultural equipment
$0.21B
+5.5%
tree and branch chippers
$0.11B
+5.5%
parts and service
$0.08B
+3.0%
The products that matter
roadside mowing and brush control
Vegetation Management Equipment
13.2% sales decline
This is the line item that matters most right now. If you own the recovery case, you are really owning the idea that this 13.2% drop starts narrowing.
core segment
vacuum trucks and snow removal
Industrial Equipment
seven straight quarters of double-digit growth
This division is doing the heavy lifting. Seven straight quarters of double-digit growth is why a weak vegetation quarter did not turn into a company-wide collapse.
offsetting force
government and utility maintenance demand
Installed Customer Base
recurring replacement need
Roads still need mowing and municipalities still need equipment. The catch is timing. You have recurring end demand, but orders still move with rates, dealer inventory, and farm economics.
steady need, uneven orders
Key numbers
$212
18-month target
That is only about 10% above $192.17 today, which tells you the near-term setup looks decent, not cheap.
19.9x
trailing p/e
P/E → price divided by earnings → so what: you are paying nearly 20 times profits for a company with sales down 1.5% last year.
13.0%
return on capital
Return on capital → profit from each dollar invested → so what: 13.0% is solid, but it is not so high that you ignore slowing demand.
$194M
long-term debt
That is 8% of capital, which means the balance sheet is not the problem here. Demand is.
Financial health
-
balance sheet grade
B++ — above average financial health
-
risk rank
3 — safer than 50% of stocks
-
price stability
75 / 100
-
long-term debt
$194M (8% of capital)
-
net profit margin
9.0% — keeps 9 cents of every dollar in revenue
-
return on equity
14% — $0.14 profit for every $1 investors have put in
B++ — functional but not a standout on the balance sheet.
Total return vs. market
You invested $10,000 in ALG 3 years ago → it's now worth $12,680.
The index would have given you $14,770.
same period. same starting point. ALG trailed the market by $2,090.
source: institutional data · total return
What just happened
missed estimates
Q4 2025 was a miss vs. street models: GAAP EPS ~$1.28 (adj. ~$1.70) on net sales ~$373.7M.
FY2025 diluted EPS ~$8.59 GAAP / ~$9.37 adjusted. Vegetation management −13.2% while industrial equipment +4.2%—the division split is the operating story.
the number that mattered
The EPS miss vs. consensus landed on a name with modest published upside—vegetation weakness stayed the focus.
-
alamo group’s 2025 has been the tale of two divisions.
-
the company’s industrial equipment division has been the primary growth engine, with the september interim marking its seventh consecutive quarter of double-digit growth.
this has been driven by strong sales in vacuum trucks, debris collectors, crash attenuators, and snow removal equipment. conversely, the vegetation management division has faced substantial headwinds, largely due to elevated interest rates, soft commodity prices, and excess channel inventories. moreover, the company’s overall profitability has been slightly dampened by production inefficiencies stemming from facility consolidations and rising costs. thus, for 2025, we expect alamo to report earnings per share around $9.65 on revenues of $1.64 billion, both of which are essentially flat compared to 2024. the company is pivoting toward a strategy of operational refinement and disciplined expansion in 2026. management has signaled a clear intent to resolve the teething pains from recent manufacturing consolidations, with efficiency gains expected to materialize fully by mid-2026. regarding expansion, the company has about $245 million in cash and significant credit availability, which positions it well to accelerate its m&a activity. the acquisition of petersen industries earlier this year serves as a blueprint for this expansion strategy, as alamo seeks to integrate high-margin, specialized product lines that complement its industrial portfolio.
-
in the longer term, the company is aiming for a target of 10%+ annual sales growth.
to reach this, alamo is centralizing its procurement processes to leverage its scale and mitigate the cost inflation that has plagued it in the past. the company also expects a rebound in municipal and infrastructure spending, bolstered by ongoing government projects, to provide a steady floor for demand.
-
-
a 13% dividend increase announced at the start of 2026 reflects management’s confidence that the current recovery phase will transition into a cycle of sustained capital returns.
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What could go wrong
ALG does not need a balance-sheet accident to disappoint you. It only needs the weak piece of the business to stay weak for longer than the stock is pricing in.
vegetation demand stays soft
The core vegetation business fell 13.2% in the quarter because rates were high, farm conditions were weak, and dealers were still carrying too much inventory. If that mix does not improve, the rebound thesis keeps sliding to the right.
This is the central risk because it hits both revenue and investor patience. Another quarter with a decline near 13.2% would make the recovery case look early.
margin recovery arrives late
Quarterly margin was 6.5% while factory consolidation still created friction. Management is pointing you to mid-2026 for improvement. If that timeline slips, the earnings recovery gets thinner fast.
When margin is only 6.5%, small execution misses matter. You do not need a disaster to miss expectations.
industrial stops offsetting the weakness
Industrial equipment has delivered seven straight quarters of double-digit growth. That has been the shock absorber. If that streak breaks before vegetation recovers, the company loses the one part of the story that still feels strong.
You would go from mixed business mix to broad slowdown. The market usually cuts less slack when both segments wobble at once.
deal activity distracts from the clean-up
Alamo has about $245M of cash and credit availability and already bought Petersen Industries. More deals could improve the portfolio over time. If management adds integration work before the core segment stabilizes, attention gets split.
This is not a debt panic risk. It is a sequencing risk — fixing operations and digesting acquisitions at the same time is harder than either one alone.
The kill shot for the rebound thesis is simple: if vegetation stays down by double digits and margin stays stuck near 6.5%, 19.9x trailing earnings stops looking patient and starts looking optimistic.
source: institutional data · regulatory filings · risk analysis
Pay attention to
!
risk
vegetation management trend
The 13.2% sales drop is the whole near-term story. If that decline starts narrowing, the stock gets a cleaner path.
#
trend
industrial growth holding up
Industrial equipment has logged seven straight quarters of double-digit growth. If that support fades while vegetation is still weak, the offset disappears.
cal
earnings
mid-2026 efficiency claims
Management says factory consolidation benefits should show by mid-2026. The next updates need to turn that timeline into margin progress.
#
metric
institutional conviction
Net buying was 147 buyers versus 127 sellers in 3q2025. If that support weakens while fundamentals stay mixed, you lose an important backstop.
Analyst rankings
short-term outlook
top 20%
momentum score 2 — in human-speak, analysts think ALG has better near-term price potential than most stocks even with mixed operating data.
risk profile
average
stability score 3 — neither a bunker stock nor a blowup setup.
chart momentum
bottom 5%
technical score 5 — the chart is weak enough that the market wants operating proof before it gets generous.
earnings predictability
75 / 100
Management is usually fairly consistent. That helps, but consistency matters less when the core segment is shrinking.
source: institutional data
Institutional activity
institutions have been net buying for 2 consecutive quarters — 147 buyers vs. 127 sellers in 3q2025. total institutional holdings: 11.8M shares. net buying for 2 quarters.
source: institutional data · 1q2025-3q2025
source: institutional data
Price targets
3-5 year target range
$149
$274
$212
target midpoint · +10% from current · 3-5yr high: $325 (+70% · 15% ann'l return)
source: institutional data · analyst targets
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