★ WIDE MOAT STOCKS & COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES ★

Checking

Kubota Corporation

6326 · Tokyo Stock Exchange

Market cap (USD)$18.6B
SectorIndustrials
IndustryAgricultural - Machinery
CountryJP
Data as of
Moat score
73/ 100

Weighted average of segment moat scores, combining moat strength, durability, confidence, market structure, pricing power, and market share.

Request update

Spot something outdated? Send a quick note and source so we can refresh this profile.

Overview

Kubota is a Japan-based industrial manufacturer with three reported segments: Farm & Industrial Machinery, Water & Environment, and Other. FY2026 Q1 revenue rose 13.7% as machinery sales recovered in North America and Europe, while FY2025 revenue was broadly flat and operating profit fell on U.S. tariff costs and mix. The core machinery business competes in an oligopoly and is strongest in compact/utility categories where dealer/service density, large installed base, and brand preference reinforce each other. Water & Environment is more project-driven but benefits from public-infrastructure track record, O&M/service solutions, and price adjustments.

Primary segment

Farm & Industrial Machinery

Market structure

Oligopoly

Market share

22%-28% (estimated)

HHI:

Coverage

3 segments · 5 tags

Updated 2026-07-01

Segments

Farm & Industrial Machinery

Agricultural machinery and compact construction equipment (incl. compact/utility tractors, construction machinery, engines)

Revenue

87.1%

Structure

Oligopoly

Pricing

moderate

Share

22%-28% (estimated)

Peers

DECNHAGCOCAT

Water & Environment

Water infrastructure products and environmental systems (pipes/valves/pumps, environmental equipment & plant engineering, O&M)

Revenue

12.4%

Structure

Competitive

Pricing

moderate

Share

Peers

XYLITTWTS

Other

Ancillary businesses (logistics, finance services, building materials)

Revenue

0.5%

Structure

Competitive

Pricing

weak

Share

Peers

Moat Claims

Farm & Industrial Machinery

Agricultural machinery and compact construction equipment (incl. compact/utility tractors, construction machinery, engines)

Revenue_share and operating_profit_share are computed from FY2025 segment results (year ended 2025-12-31). Operating profit shares are based on reportable segment operating profit before the 'Adjustments' line item; Kubota changed its segment expense allocation from FY2025.

Oligopoly

Service Field Network

Supply

Strength

Strength 4 of 5

Durability

Durability 3 of 3

Confidence

Confidence 4 of 5

Evidence

Evidence 1 of 5

Dense dealer and service footprint, especially in North America, supports sales coverage, local support, and parts/service pull-through.

Service Field Network moat: definition, examples, and stocks

Erosion risks

  • Dealer consolidation reduces exclusivity/coverage advantages
  • Competitors bundle precision-ag ecosystems + finance to pull share
  • Price competition in commoditized horsepower bands

Leading indicators

  • Dealer count/coverage and dealer satisfaction
  • Aftermarket/parts & service revenue growth
  • U.S. compact tractor unit share trend

Counterarguments

  • Dealers often carry multiple brands; channel is not exclusive
  • End buyers can switch if price/availability shifts

Installed Base Consumables

Demand

Strength

Strength 3 of 5

Durability

Durability 3 of 3

Confidence

Confidence 3 of 5

Evidence

Evidence 1 of 5

Installed equipment base supports recurring parts/service and aftermarket opportunity, reinforced by a large tractor fleet and dealer infrastructure.

Installed Base Consumables moat: definition, examples, and stocks

Erosion risks

  • Third-party parts and independent service networks
  • Telematics/diagnostics platforms controlled by competitors
  • Extended replacement cycles in downturns reduce parts pull-through

Leading indicators

  • Parts/service revenue share of segment sales
  • Warranty claims and reliability metrics
  • Installed base age distribution

Counterarguments

  • Aftermarket can be price-competitive and less defensible than OEM equipment sales
  • Right-to-repair policy momentum could reduce OEM capture

Brand Trust

Demand

Strength

Strength 4 of 5

Durability

Durability 3 of 3

Confidence

Confidence 3 of 5

Evidence

Evidence 2 of 5

Strong brand association in compact tractors and compact construction equipment supports preference and repeat purchases.

Brand Trust moat: definition, examples, and stocks

Erosion risks

  • Brand dilution if reliability issues rise
  • Competitors close the gap in compact tractor product features
  • Shift toward autonomous/precision features where competitors lead

Leading indicators

  • Brand consideration and NPS in compact segment
  • Warranty/recall frequency
  • Dealer stocking preference vs competitors

Counterarguments

  • Brand strength is strongest in compact/utility categories, not across all tractor HP ranges
  • Promotional financing and availability can outweigh brand in purchase decisions

Water & Environment

Water infrastructure products and environmental systems (pipes/valves/pumps, environmental equipment & plant engineering, O&M)

Revenue_share and operating_profit_share are computed from FY2025 segment results (year ended 2025-12-31). Operating profit shares are based on reportable segment operating profit before the 'Adjustments' line item; Kubota changed its segment expense allocation from FY2025.

Competitive

Long Term Contracts

Demand

Strength

Strength 3 of 5

Durability

Durability 2 of 3

Confidence

Confidence 4 of 5

Evidence

Evidence 2 of 5

Project-based businesses create multi-year contracted revenue visibility; FY2025 segment profit rose as sales and price adjustments improved.

Long Term Contracts moat: definition, examples, and stocks

Erosion risks

  • Municipal budget constraints and project delays
  • Competitive bidding compresses margins
  • Shift to alternative pipe systems/materials

Leading indicators

  • Remaining performance obligations / backlog trend
  • O&M revenue growth rate
  • Bid win-rate and gross margin trend

Counterarguments

  • Long-duration contracts can still be low-margin if competitively bid
  • Backlog visibility does not guarantee pricing power

Service Field Network

Supply

Strength

Strength 3 of 5

Durability

Durability 2 of 3

Confidence

Confidence 3 of 5

Evidence

Evidence 1 of 5

O&M (operations & maintenance) services and solutions deepen customer relationships and can increase switching costs over time.

Service Field Network moat: definition, examples, and stocks

Erosion risks

  • Concession/O&M contracts awarded to competitors
  • Labor shortages in field-service operations
  • Customer insourcing of operations

Leading indicators

  • O&M revenue share of segment sales
  • Renewal rate for O&M contracts
  • Field-service staffing and utilization

Counterarguments

  • O&M services can be rebid periodically; switching costs may be limited
  • Local contractors can undercut on price

Government Contracting Relationships

Legal

Strength

Strength 3 of 5

Durability

Durability 2 of 3

Confidence

Confidence 3 of 5

Evidence

Evidence 1 of 5

Meaningful exposure to public-sector customers where track record and qualifications matter for bids.

Government Contracting Relationships moat: definition, examples, and stocks

Erosion risks

  • Procurement rules change or anti-collusion enforcement
  • Government austerity cycles
  • Competitive entrants with lower cost structures

Leading indicators

  • Public-sector order volume trend
  • Tender win-rate
  • Compliance and audit findings

Counterarguments

  • Government procurement is often price-driven with formal tender rules
  • Relationships cannot fully override competitive bidding

Other

Ancillary businesses (logistics, finance services, building materials)

Revenue_share and operating_profit_share are computed from FY2025 segment results (year ended 2025-12-31). Operating profit shares are based on reportable segment operating profit before the 'Adjustments' line item; Kubota changed its segment expense allocation from FY2025.

Competitive

Adjacency moat from captive support services

Demand

Strength

Strength 2 of 5

Durability

Durability 2 of 3

Confidence

Confidence 2 of 5

Evidence

Evidence 1 of 5

Small ancillary businesses (e.g., logistics and finance services) can benefit from being bundled with the core equipment business and distribution relationships, but are generally not strongly defensible on their own.

Ancillary services are strategically useful (supporting equipment sales), but likely face many substitutes and competition.

Erosion risks

  • Specialist logistics/finance providers compete on price
  • Regulatory changes in consumer/retail finance

Leading indicators

  • Attach rate of finance/logistics services to equipment sales
  • Credit losses in captive finance
  • Margin trend vs peers

Counterarguments

  • Most services are replicable and compete in open markets
  • Scale is small relative to the core machinery business

Evidence

other

Explore Kubota’s network of over 1,100 trusted dealers across the U.S.

Direct support for the scale and coverage of Kubota's U.S. dealer network.

other

tractors that have global production totaling more than 6.1 million units

Large cumulative tractor production supports installed-base economics for parts, service, and replacement demand.

other

In America, KUBOTA takes a high share of the market for compact tractors of 40 horsepower and below and can be said to be well established as a brand.

Company statement supports brand moat in a key subsegment.

other

world's leading seller of mini excavators for 24 consecutive years

Supports brand/reputation strength in compact construction equipment as well as farm equipment.

news

Estimated market share of the compact tractor segment today is around 25%.

Used to bound a reasonable market share range around the stated ~25%.

Showing 5 of 10 sources.

Risks & Indicators

Erosion risks

  • Dealer consolidation reduces exclusivity/coverage advantages
  • Competitors bundle precision-ag ecosystems + finance to pull share
  • Price competition in commoditized horsepower bands
  • Third-party parts and independent service networks
  • Telematics/diagnostics platforms controlled by competitors
  • Extended replacement cycles in downturns reduce parts pull-through

Leading indicators

  • Dealer count/coverage and dealer satisfaction
  • Aftermarket/parts & service revenue growth
  • U.S. compact tractor unit share trend
  • Discounting/price realization vs input costs
  • Parts/service revenue share of segment sales
  • Warranty claims and reliability metrics

Keep the research going

Created 2025-12-30
Updated 2026-07-01

More Rankings & Systems

Curation & Accuracy

This directory blends AI‑assisted discovery with human curation. Entries are reviewed, edited, and organized with the goal of expanding coverage and sharpening quality over time. Your feedback helps steer improvements (because no single human can capture everything all at once).

Details change. Pricing, features, and availability may be incomplete or out of date. Treat listings as a starting point and verify on the provider’s site before making decisions. If you spot an error or a gap, send a quick note and I’ll adjust.