Why Deere is more than a machinery cycle story
Deere & Company is still cyclical. Management said in its Q1 2026 earnings release that fiscal 2026 represents the bottom of the current cycle, and the recent numbers show why. In Q1 2026, worldwide net sales and revenues were $9.6 billion, net sales were $8 billion, net income was $656 million, and Production & Precision Agriculture net sales grew 3% year over year to $3.16 billion, with operating profit of $139 million and operating margin of 4.4%.
That is the cyclical story investors know. But it is incomplete. Deere’s 2025 10-K says the company is pursuing a Smart Industrial Operating Model built around deeper integration of technology into equipment, alongside autonomy, digitalization, lifecycle solutions, and Solutions as a Service.
That matters because Deere is no longer just selling iron. It is building longer-duration relationships around precision guidance, telematics, service, and software-enabled workflows. A farmer may delay a new machine purchase yet remain inside the Deere ecosystem through repair work, parts, telematics, and precision tools.
What deferred revenue and precision services say about the installed base
The clearest evidence sits on the balance sheet. Deere’s Q1 2026 10-Q says deferred revenue tied to precision guidance, telematics services, and other information-enabled solutions was $2.121 billion at February 1, 2026, up from $2.039 billion at November 2, 2025 and $2.027 billion at January 26, 2025. Deere also recognized $265 million of revenue in Q1 2026 from deferred revenue recorded at the beginning of the fiscal year.
Those figures matter because deferred revenue reflects cash already received for services Deere still has to deliver. In plain terms, the company is carrying a meaningful pool of service- and software-linked commitments even while equipment demand is soft. That supports the idea that Deere’s installed base has economic value beyond the initial machine sale.
The same filing says customers pay through Deere’s channels for equipment, service parts, repair services, and certain telematics services. That helps explain why a downturn in new equipment does not automatically sever the revenue relationship. If farmers run existing fleets longer, that can reinforce parts, repair, and uptime needs.
Why the dealer network and Financial Services arm still matter in a downturn
Deere’s 2025 10-K says the dealer network is central to product distribution, service, used-equipment management, and precision-technology support. That is a strategic asset, not just a sales channel. In a downturn, dealers help manage used inventory, support resale values, keep fleets working, and maintain the service relationships that tie customers to Deere’s ecosystem.
Deere’s Q1 2026 10-Q says dealer practices matter not only for equipment distribution and inventory management, but also for support and service of precision technology solutions. The dealer network therefore helps protect both the physical installed base and the software-and-service layer attached to it.
Financial Services adds another stabilizer. In Q2 2026, Deere reported net sales and revenues of $13.369 billion, net sales of $11.778 billion, net income of $1.773 billion, and diluted EPS of $6.55. Its Financial Services segment earned $190 million, up 18% year over year, helped by favorable financing spreads. That does not erase cycle risk, but it shows Deere is not relying solely on equipment margins to carry the business through a trough.
What investors should watch next: replacement demand, margins, and execution
The main risk is still simple: Deere remains cyclical, and a deeper agriculture downturn would hurt volumes, margins, and potentially credit quality. The company reaffirmed FY2026 net income guidance of $4.5 billion to $5.0 billion in both its February and May 2026 earnings materials, which shows management still expects meaningful earnings power, but below peak conditions.
The more important question is whether Deere emerges from this trough with stronger installed-base economics than in past cycles. Investors should watch whether deferred revenue continues to build, whether Production & Precision Agriculture margins hold up better than a pure equipment model would imply, and whether Deere’s through-cycle R&D spending translates into stronger product launches. Management has already said sustained R&D investment is yielding measurable results and supporting innovative launches across segments.
If those pieces hold together, Deere’s rebound may prove sharper than a traditional volume-only framework suggests.
Key Signals for Investors
Watch whether deferred revenue tied to precision guidance and telematics keeps growing; that would support the installed-base thesis even in a soft demand environment.
Track Production & Precision Agriculture margins for signs that services and technology are helping protect profitability at the bottom of the cycle.
Monitor dealer inventory normalization, because a healthier used-equipment channel should improve the timing and quality of replacement demand.
Follow Financial Services results for evidence that financing remains a stabilizer rather than becoming an added source of pressure.

















