Topic: How To Invest

Continued U.S. expansion is key to growth for Stella-Jones

Continued U.S. expansion is key to growth for Stella-Jones

Pat McKeough responds to many personal questions about specific stock market advice and other investment topics from the members of his Inner Circle. Every week, his comments and recommendations on the most intriguing questions of the past week go out to all Inner Circle members. And each week, we offer you one of the highlights from these Q&A sessions. While we reserve our buy-hold-sell advice for Inner Circle members, these excerpts provide a great deal of information and analysis on stocks we’ve covered for members of Pat’s Inner Circle.

This week, one Inner Circle member asked about a Canadian stock that plays a unique role in the transportation and utilities industries. Stella-Jones has established a niche as a maker of railroad ties and telephone poles, and Pat looks at its ambitious expansion program into the United States and the risks of this growth-by-acquisition strategy.

Q: Hi Pat: Could you please provide your input on Stella-Jones? Thank you.

A: Stella-Jones Inc., (symbol SJ on Toronto; www.stella-jones.com) makes pressure-treated wood products, including railway ties (59% of sales), utility poles (27%), lumber for industrial uses, such as construction timbers and highway guardrails (8%), and treated lumber products for the residential market (6%).

The company gets most of its utility poles from timberlands it leases in Quebec, B.C. and Alberta. It also buys wood for railway ties and other products from sawmills in Canada and the U.S.

Stella-Jones continues to expand in the U.S., which now provides two-thirds of its sales. In April 2010, it purchased Tangent Rail Corp. for $170 million U.S. Tangent makes railway ties at plants in Alabama, Indiana, Louisiana and Pennsylvania.

In December 2011, the company paid $34.9 million U.S. for Thompson Industries Inc. This Arkansas-based company makes treated railway ties and other products.

In addition, Stella-Jones just bought McFarland Cascade Holdings Inc. for $250 million U.S. Washington State-based McFarland makes utility poles and treated lumber for decks, railings and other residential uses.

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Sales of railway ties jump while utility poles decline

In the three months ended September 30, 2012, Stella-Jones’s sales rose 7.5%, to $195.4 million from $181.8 million a year earlier. Thompson Industries added $12.3 million to the company’s sales in the latest quarter. As well, favourable foreign exchange rates boosted sales by $4.1 million. Sales of railway ties jumped 24.2%, while residential product sales increased 14.9%. These gains offset declines for industrial products (down 33.9%) and utility poles (down 4.3%).

Earnings rose 24.8%, to $20.7 million, or $1.29 a share. A year earlier, the company earned $16.6 million, or $1.03 a share.

Stella-Jones has no cash, but its long-term debt of $176.2 million is a moderate 13.6% of its market cap.

The shares are up 73% since April 2012. They trade at 14.0 times the company’s forecast 2013 earnings of $5.60 a share. The stock yields 0.8%.

In the Inner Circle Q&A, Pat examines the risk added by the company’s growth-by-acquisition strategy and whether it can be balanced by North American power companies upgrading their transmission and distribution grids. He concludes with his clear buy-hold-sell advice on the stock.

(Note: If you are a current member of the Inner Circle, please click here to view Pat’s recommendation. Be sure to log in first.)

COMMENTS PLEASE—Share your investment experience and opinions with fellow TSINetwork.ca members

Are you optimistic about Canadian stocks that expand their operations into the United States? Or are you put off by the many examples of Canadian firms that failed in their American ventures? Have you had notable success, or failure, with such stocks? Let us know what you think.

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