By James R. Hagerty 

Caterpillar Inc. nudged its earnings forecast higher for 2015 but still expects to fall well short of last year's level amid falling sales of equipment related to oil and gas exploration and continued weakness in mining.

Rivals in Europe and Japan, whose weaker currencies give them cost advantages, are stepping up price competition, Mike DeWalt, a Caterpillar vice president, said in a conference call with analysts. "It's just a tough business now," he said. "It's dog eat dog."

The Peoria, Ill.-based maker of construction and mining equipment said it expects earnings per share of about $4.70 for the full year, down from $5.88 in 2014. Previously, Caterpillar forecast earnings of $4.60 per share in 2015.

Profit in the first quarter grew 20% from a year earlier, partly due to "very good cost control," Mr. DeWalt said.

Caterpillar maintained its earlier forecast that sales for the full year will total about $50 billion, down 9% from 2014. That reflects weaker markets for engines used in oil drilling as well as for construction equipment in China and railroad locomotives in the U.S.

Caterpillar's order backlog at the end of the first quarter was down nearly 15% from a year earlier. Meanwhile, overdue amounts payable by customers of the financing unit grew to 3.08% of the portfolio from 2.44% a year earlier.

China's slowing economy is a worry, executives said, but they hope for improvement in Europe as a weaker euro spurs exports, cheaper oil reduces costs and low interest rates encourage spending. "I think we're in the early stages of what will be a recovery" in Europe, said Caterpillar Chief Executive Doug Oberhelman. "I don't think it will be a boom."

The company faces a persistent slump in mining equipment, sluggishness in construction machinery in much of the world and a more recent slowdown in its most profitable business, engines used for such things as generating electricity, pushing gas through pipelines, running industrial machines and powering trains and ships.

Despite those pressures, Andy Kaplowitz, an analyst at Barclays Bank, urged Caterpillar to stick with its program of repurchasing shares to support the stock price. Caterpillar said it bought back $400 million of stock in the first quarter and expects to continue repurchases at about that quarterly rate this year, though it said priorities "can change based on business and market conditions."

Mr. Kaplowitz also said Caterpillar probably needs to be more aggressive about scaling back production capacity, especially in mining. Caterpillar has manufacturing capacity for annual sales of $80 billion to $100 billion, but sales now are running at around $50 billion a year, the analyst said.

Brad Halverson, Caterpillar's chief financial officer, said the company had closed or shrunk 20 facilities since 2013 and shed 15,000 jobs. Still, he said, Caterpillar needs enough capacity "to be ready for the upturn."

Mr. Kaplowitz said the company may be overestimating its needs: "The world is going to come back but maybe not in as big a way as Caterpillar believes."

Stephen Volkmann, an analyst at Jefferies Group, said Caterpillar had "done a pretty good job" controlling costs and funneling cash to shareholders. He said the company seemed an unlikely target for activist investors seeking major changes and had no unrelated businesses to shed. "There's nothing obvious to spin (off) or sell," Mr. Volkmann said.

Profit in the first quarter rose to $1.11 billion from $922 million a year earlier. Earnings per share increased to $1.81 from $1.44. Analysts had forecast earnings of $1.35 for the latest quarter.

Caterpillar earnings benefited by 14 cents a share from the sale of the company's remaining stake in a logistics business.

Sales slipped 4% to $12.7 billion.

Write to James R. Hagerty at bob.hagerty@wsj.com

Corrections & Amplifications

Caterpillar Inc. reported a profit of $922 million a year ago. An earlier version of this story misstated the figure as billions.

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