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Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT) spent much of the past decade being labeled a cyclical industrial bellwether tied to construction, mining, and commodity prices. That story has changed. The company is now riding an unexpected tailwind: AI data center power demand. In Q1 2026, Power Generation revenue within Energy & Transportation jumped 41%. Construction Industries sales rose 38%, with segment margins expanding to 21.4%. CEO Joe Creed called out “a record backlog” even as $1.03 billion in tariff-related costs compressed Q4 2025 operating margin to 13.9%.
Walmart (NYSE:WMT) has quietly transformed from big-box retailer to omnichannel platform. In Q1 FY27, global eCommerce grew 26% and now makes up 23% of net sales, while global advertising jumped 37%. U.S. comps rose 4.1% excluding fuel, with the strongest share gains coming from upper-income households. John Furner recently took the CEO reins from Doug McMillon.
| Caterpillar | Walmart | S&P 500 | |
| 1-Year | $2,427.30 (+142.73%) | $1,132.10 (+13.21%) | $1,204.70 (+20.47%) |
| 5-Year | $4,847.70 (+384.77%) | $2,554.90 (+155.49%) | $1,735.10 (+73.51%) |
| 10-Year | $15,241.60 (+1,424.16%) | $5,377.90 (+437.79%) | $3,516.20 (+251.62%) |
A $1,000 stake in Caterpillar a decade ago would be worth roughly fifteen times that today, far outpacing both Walmart and the broader index. Most of that outperformance is recent: the stock is up 64.1% year-to-date on the AI power thesis. Walmart’s story is steadier. It beat the S&P 500 at five and 10 years but is trailing the benchmark over the past year as its 39 P/E multiple digests reality.
Caterpillar looks compelling for investors who believe data center capital spending keeps compounding and gas turbine backlogs stretch into 2028. The bear case is that this is a cyclical play dressed up as a secular growth story. A 9.0% drop in the past week hints at how quickly sentiment can change. Tariff costs are real. After the share price more than doubled in 12 months, caution is warranted.
Walmart appeals to those who want a defensive compounder with real growth optionality in ads and marketplace. The bear case is valuation. Paying 39x earnings for a retailer growing sales in the mid-single digits leaves little margin for error. Shares would look more attractive on any pullback toward the low $100s. At current levels, patience is the play.
Between the two, Walmart is the steadier long-term compounder. Caterpillar is the higher-volatility growth story. That difference matters.
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