Rermag 6185 Equipmentwatch Highestretainedvalue2017 1
Rermag 6185 Equipmentwatch Highestretainedvalue2017 1
Rermag 6185 Equipmentwatch Highestretainedvalue2017 1
Rermag 6185 Equipmentwatch Highestretainedvalue2017 1
Rermag 6185 Equipmentwatch Highestretainedvalue2017 1

EquipmentWatch Names Highest Retained Value Award Winners for 2017

Feb. 22, 2017
EquipmentWatch, provider of data, software and insights for the heavy equipment industry, has presented 28 awards on its second annual list of Highest Retained Value Award winners, the industry’s only award based on residual values of heavy equipment.

EquipmentWatch, provider of data, software and insights for the heavy equipment industry, has presented 28 awards on its second annual list of Highest Retained Value Award winners, the industry’s only award based on residual values of heavy equipment. Top honors in each category were given to the model and series projected to retain the highest percentage of its original value after five years.

The awards recognize winners in construction, agriculture and lift/access equipment categories. Caterpillar and John Deere tied for most awards won in 2017 with four each. Caterpillar maintains a slight edge with a total of nine compared to eight accumulated since the program’s inception in 2016.

Five series continued their dominance by winning for the second consecutive year in 2017, a sign that residual values among popular types of equipment are competitive. Repeat winners include Apache (self-propelled sprayers), Case (backhoes), Gehl (small skid-steer loaders), JLG (articulating boomlift) and SkyTrak (lift trucks-telehandlers).

“The Highest Retained Value Award is indicative of excellence across a manufacturing organization,” said Garrett Schemmel, vice president of EquipmentWatch. “Product quality has the most obvious impact on an asset’s performance on the secondary market, but residual values are also highly impact by brand affinity and fair original pricing. A manufacturer must excel on all three fronts to gain recognition as a Highest Retained Value Award winner.”

While the largest brands (Caterpillar, Deere, Komatsu) continued to dominate certain categories, a notable number of specialized manufacturers with product series that showed significantly greater retained value than their competition, such as Bomag, Challenger and Hyundai.

“For purchasers of equipment, there is perhaps no single measurement more influential in the buying decision process,” added Schemmel. “The residual value of an asset will have a significant impact on leasing terms and lifetime ownership costs. Informed buyers do well to weigh value retention heavily when considering equipment acquisition.”

To create the 2017 Highest Retained Value Awards, EquipmentWatch analysts considered 12,536 models. The list was narrowed down to 156 series from 36 brands. Once the finalists were set, residual values were calculated at the series level by leveraging a database covering more than $412 billion in market activity in order to identify the winner in each category.

To learn more about the winning models and program methodology, visit: www.equipmentwatch.com/residual-value-awards.