8 Most Profitable Manufacturing Stocks to Buy Now

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American manufacturing is rebuilding, not as a meme, as capex. Manufacturing facility construction is running at $223.1B SAAR in July 2025, a level that would have sounded unreal three years ago. In real terms, factory construction has more than doubled since late 2021, driven by computers/electronics and electrical equipment, exactly the categories tied to fabs, battery plants, and grid gear.

Policy is translating into checks, not press releases. Under CHIPS, the Commerce Department says it has awarded over $33B of incentives across more than 20 states (out of >$36B proposed), catalyzing private investment across the semiconductor chain. (Awards are paid out against milestones, but the commitments are real.)

The reshoring leg is visible in project pipelines. The Reshoring Initiative’s latest annual report tallied ~244,000 announced U.S. manufacturing jobs in 2024, with ~1.7 million filled since 2010, a reminder that the hiring wave is cumulative and multi-cycle, not a single print.

Production and labor haven’t caught up to the construction curve… yet. The ISM Manufacturing PMI was 48.7 in August 2025 (contraction, but less bad than July), consistent with a sector stabilizing after a soft 2024. Headcount is basically flat-to-down: manufacturing employment fell ~78,000 year over year through August 2025. That’s what early-cycle, capital-intensive buildouts look like: plants rise first; output and payroll follow with a lag.

8 Most Profitable Manufacturing Stocks to Buy Now

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Methodology

For our list of the most profitable manufacturing stocks to buy now, we isolated a sample of companies in the manufacturing industry with the cut-offs being at-least $1 billion revenue and at-least $300 million in net income (TTM). We then picked stocks with the highest TTM net margins and ranked them as such to reflect revenue-adjusted profitability.

A limitation of this methodology is that many of the companies on our list have a specific focus within the larger manufacturing industry and so their net incomes and net margins are relative to their sub-industry averages and their broad comparison in this list with companies from other sub-industries might not be highly meaningful. We sourced the data from Stockanalysis.com.

Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter’s strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 373.4% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 218 percentage points  (see more details here).

8. Caterpillar Inc. (NYSE:CAT)

Net Margin: 15%

Net Income: $9.44 Billion

Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 76

Caterpillar Inc. (NYSE:CAT) is one of the most profitable manufacturing stocks to buy now.

On October 22, 2025, RBC Capital Markets initiated coverage of Caterpillar with a Sector Perform rating and a $560 price target. The firm’s analysts noted that Caterpillar is “well‑positioned in a generally mid‑cycle operating backdrop,” but added that current market expectations already reflect the company’s fundamentals.

In other words, while the business remains healthy, RBC doesn’t see a strong case for outperformance unless new upside catalysts emerge. Their view echoes a broader market consensus: construction and mining demand remain solid, but growth expectations are now embedded in valuation, and investors may need to wait for a new leg up.

Caterpillar Inc. (NYSE:CAT) is a global leader in heavy equipment manufacturing, producing construction and mining machinery, diesel and natural gas engines, industrial gas turbines, and diesel-electric locomotives. Its core revenue streams are tightly linked to infrastructure, energy, and commodity cycles — placing it at the center of industrial capex trends worldwide.

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