By Robert Guy Matthews 
   Of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 
 

Caterpillar Inc. is pushing further into the rail business by buying a maker of locomotives, and taking on General Electric Co. in the process.

On Tuesday, the heavy-equipment maker said it would pay $820 million for Electro-Motive Diesel, in a bet that freight transport will grow as the economy strengthens.

Caterpillar, which has invested close to $1.2 billion since 2006 in the rail and transit sector, said its acquisition of Electro-Motive Diesel will make it the second largest locomotive and rail services provider in the U.S. behind GE. The investment adds a production component to Caterpillar's existing rail repair and service business.

"This acquisition represents the latest step in our strategic plan to aggressively grow our presence in the global rail industry," said Caterpillar Vice Chairman Doug Oberhelman, who takes over as chief executive of Caterpillar in July.

Electro-Motive, which was owned by Berkshire Partners LLC and Greenbriar Equity Group LLC, had sales of $1.8 billion in 2009.

In 2006, Caterpillar spent $800 million in cash and stock to buy Progress Rail Services, a railcar maintenance and repair business. Electro-Motive will become a unit of Progress Rail.

For the last couple years, Caterpillar has been looking to expand into manufacturing-related services to help offset the cyclical demand in capital goods. Often during recessions, companies invest less in new equipment than in servicing existing machines. Providing aftermarket services allows Caterpillar to tap into a stream of revenue when original equipment sales slow.

The rail business has been under pressure as the recession put the brakes on demand for diesel trains to transport goods across the country. But government spending on stimulus projects is expected to spur rail projects, as will demand for consumer goods as the economy recovers.

"What this does is position them as one of the top two players in the U.S., along with GE," says Lawrence De Maria, industrial analyst for Sterne Agee.

Once the Electro-Motive Diesel acquisition is completed, expected by year end, Caterpillar, along with its subsidiary Progress Rail Services, will have the biggest locomotive customer fleet on the rails, he said. Electro-Motive Diesel has an installed base of 33,000 locomotives, and an expanding presence in China and India.

GE has 15,000 locomotives operating world-wide.

The deal combines two Illinois companies: Caterpillar is based in Peoria and Electro-Motive is in LaGrange.

(Bob Tita contributed to this article.)

 
 
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