Titan Machinery(TITN 3.05%) reported fiscal second quarter ended July 31, 2025, earnings on August 28, 2025, showing a 14% decline in total revenue, a consolidated net loss of $6 million, and narrowed full-year fiscal 2026 guidance to an adjusted diluted loss per share range of $1.50-$2.00. The company reaffirmed progress on strategic inventory reduction, lifted its Europe segment outlook, and highlighted near-term margin compression tied to aggressive inventory actions and challenging domestic agriculture market conditions.
Inventory reduction drives Titan Machinery margin compression
Equipment inventory stood at $954 million as of quarter-end, flat compared to fiscal 2025 year-end, but $365 million below the fiscal second quarter ended July 31, 2024, peak, following an aggressive destocking program by management. This proactive inventory approach has necessitated deeper pricing concessions and placed sustained downward pressure on equipment margins, particularly in the domestic Agriculture segment, which posted a margin of 3.1% for the first half of fiscal 2026, compared to a historical range of 8%-12%.
"As we continue down this path, we now expect our equipment margins to remain subdued through the rest of fiscal 2026, which is the primary variable that underpins the narrowed EPS guidance that we've updated today. This disciplined approach is fundamental to our plan of emerging from this cycle stronger and better positioned for fiscal 2027."
-- Bryan J. Knutson, President and CEO
While short-term profitability suffers, successful inventory right-sizing should accelerate margin normalization and reduce interest expense in fiscal 2027, positioning Titan Machinery to regain historical return levels as industry demand stabilizes.
European strength offsets weak U.S. Agriculture for Titan Machinery
The Europe segment, powered by Romanian demand ahead of an EU stimulus deadline, delivered a 44% year-over-year same-store sales increase to $98.1 million, with equipment margins holding up significantly better than in North America. Revised segment guidance now calls for Europe revenue up 30%-40% year-over-year for fiscal 2026, partially offsetting weakness in U.S. Agriculture (domestic Agriculture revenue expected down 15%-20% year-over-year for fiscal 2026), and allowing consolidated total equipment margin for fiscal 2026 to be guided to 6.6%, despite heavy U.S. discounting.
"We've actually pulled down more than that, right? But you see our mix shifting as we're now suggesting that Europe is going to grow 30% to 40% for fiscal 2026, with Europe having strong equipment margins and not seeing nearly the compression we're experiencing domestically. So overall, equipment margins are going down 100 basis points. U.S. ag going down more than that, somewhat being masked by the strength in Europe and specifically Romania, right?"
-- Robert Larsen, CFO
Exposure to higher-margin, cyclically robust international markets provides Titan Machinery with earnings diversification, cushioning the impact of adverse domestic cycle dynamics on consolidated results.
Titan Machinery strengthens competitive position through disciplined trade-ins and analytics
The company continues to accept all trade-in opportunities, leveraging a dynamic pricing model informed by predictive analytics and supply analysis, in contrast to some competitors who are limiting trade acceptance to manage used inventory exposure. This approach enables Titan Machinery to selectively gain market share and shift late-model equipment, even in periods of weak dealer discipline and excess supply industry-wide.
"We quote everything. We never walk away from a deal. It's math. It's a numbers game. It's very important that you got to know your numbers. But every deal makes sense at some point. And so that the trade-in value might be a lot lower than the customer wishes. The trade difference might be a lot higher than the customer wishes or the annual payments might be a lot higher. But there -- we have such a professional back-office team here in our evaluations and how they follow the used market. And so -- and the predictive analytics that we're using along with current data. And so that's really the most important thing is you got to get the amount of money right that it's going to take to recondition the trade properly to get it turned in a timely fashion, and you got to get it on market to where the market is going."
-- Bryan J. Knutson, President and CEO
This rigorous, data-driven approach improves inventory liquidity, limits risk from holding depreciating assets, and enhances Titan Machinery’s competitive advantage during downcycles, when weaker rivals may cede volume and share.
Looking ahead
Management reiterated its expectation to exceed the $100 million equipment inventory reduction target for fiscal 2026, with anticipated margin recovery in fiscal 2027 as destocking is completed and pricing pressures ease. Full-year fiscal 2026 consolidated equipment margin is now projected at approximately 6.6%, with domestic Agriculture margins at 3.8%. Revenue guidance was revised to: domestic Agriculture down 15%-20%, Construction down 3%-8%, Europe up 30%-40%, and Australia down 20%-25% year-over-year for fiscal 2026; no new quantitative guidance was issued for fiscal 2027 margin or earnings levels.