TLDR
- Caterpillar acquired Skycatch, a spatial data and AI analytics company for the mining industry
- Financial terms were not disclosed
- The deal follows Caterpillar’s recent purchase of RPMGlobal, continuing a push into data-driven mining tech
- CAT stock opened at $928.58 Tuesday, down 4.94% on the day
- Wall Street holds a Moderate Buy consensus on CAT with an average price target of $949.41
Caterpillar (CAT) acquired Skycatch, Inc., a spatial data capture and AI analytics company serving the mining industry. The deal was announced Tuesday and no financial terms were disclosed.
Caterpillar $CAT just announced it has agreed to acquire Skycatch
"a provider of spatial data and AI-powered analytics for the mining industry" pic.twitter.com/UbqqMkFWYm
— Evan (@StockMKTNewz) July 7, 2026
Skycatch builds technology that captures high-frequency, high-precision spatial data from mining sites. Its AI tools process that data to create a near-real-time digital twin of mine operations, which can plug into existing software platforms.
CAT stock opened at $928.58 on Tuesday, down nearly 5% on the day. The stock has traded between $391.52 and $1,073.46 over the past year.
The Skycatch acquisition follows Caterpillar’s recent purchase of RPMGlobal, a mining planning software company. Together, the two deals push Caterpillar deeper into the data and automation side of mining operations.
Denise Johnson, group president of Caterpillar Resource Industries, said the deal fits the company’s strategy to help customers improve safety, productivity and predictability across both staffed and autonomous fleets.
RPMGlobal CEO Richard Mathews noted that Skycatch’s ability to process large volumes of spatial data at speed will help miners adjust plans quickly as conditions on the ground change.
Skycatch founder and CEO Christian Sanz called the acquisition the next chapter for the company after ten years in operation.
Strong Financials Behind the Move
Caterpillar reported $17.41 billion in revenue for Q1 2025, beating analyst estimates of $16.53 billion. Revenue was up 22.2% year-over-year.
The company posted EPS of $5.54 for the quarter, clearing the consensus estimate of $4.65 by $0.89. Analysts expect full-year EPS of $24.71.
Caterpillar also raised its quarterly dividend to $1.63 per share, up from $1.51 — an 8% increase. The dividend will be paid August 19 to holders of record as of July 20.
Analyst Targets and Institutional Activity
Evercore holds an outperform rating with a $1,103 price target. Jefferies raised its target to $1,045 with a Buy rating. HSBC went to $1,100. The average analyst target sits at $949.41, with 16 Buy ratings and 9 Hold ratings.
Institutional investors own about 71% of CAT stock. Vanguard holds the largest stake at over 46 million shares. Bank of America grew its position by 16% in Q4.
Integrated Advisors Network trimmed its CAT position by 6.5% in Q1 but the stock remains its 7th-largest holding at about 1.6% of its portfolio.
On the insider side, two Caterpillar executives sold stock in May. Anthony Fassino sold 16,283 shares at $916.80 and Denise Johnson sold 12,605 shares at $907.91. Insiders have sold roughly $87.6 million worth of stock over the past 90 days.
Caterpillar has a market cap of $427.69 billion and a P/E ratio of 46.29. The 50-day moving average stands at $921.01.







