Last year was a difficult one for investors in industrial supply company Fastenal $FAST . The stock ended the year flat, and managed to underperform sector peers such as Grainger $GWW and MSC Industrial $MSM. Furthermore, the Institute for Supply Management, or ISM,
manufacturing data got a lot stronger in the second half, but Fastenal's
performance did not. What's going on? Can the market expect more from
the company this year?
Fastenal disappoints, again
Having warned investors that it would miss quarterly earnings per share estimates of $0.36 in its update in December, Fastenal then managed to miss its upgraded estimate of "growth in net earnings per share" by reporting flat earnings growth of $0.33 for its fourth quarter.
Having warned investors that it would miss quarterly earnings per share estimates of $0.36 in its update in December, Fastenal then managed to miss its upgraded estimate of "growth in net earnings per share" by reporting flat earnings growth of $0.33 for its fourth quarter.
Superficially, this is surprising given the strength of the ISM manufacturing data:
In addition, MSC Industrial's management reported
on its January conference call that feedback from its manufacturing
customers "confirms the current theme of stabilization and gives us some
cause for greater optimism about 2014."
So why did Fastenal miss esimates?
Fastenal adjusts its sales operations, gets heavy too
In the December update, Fastenal outlined the three reasons for the earnings miss.
In the December update, Fastenal outlined the three reasons for the earnings miss.
First, despite the strong ISM numbers, Fastenal is
having some issues with its particular end markets. The company
generates 50% of its sales from manufacturing, 25% from non-residential
construction and the rest from a diverse set of business. Within its
manufacturing sales, heavy manufacturing makes up 80% of sales with
heavy equipment making up half in turn. Be sure to distinguish between
Fastenal's heavy manufacturing and its heavy equipment sales, the latter
is a subset of the former.
All told, heavy equipment makes up 20% of total
company sales and this segment was weak in 2013. In fact, Fastenal
disclosed that heavy equipment sales (agriculture, mining, construction,
defense, etc.) grew less than 2% in the third quarter, and only 1.5% in
the fourth, even as heavy manufacturing sales were up "between 6% and
7%". The good news is that heavy manufacturing sales appear to be
recovering (in line with the ISM) with a 7.2% in the fourth quarter
following a 5% gain in the third.
Indeed, the theme was confirmed by MSC Industrial's
management on its recent conference call: "Overall, we continue to see
that our core customer segments in heavy metalworking are still lagging
the broader industrial economy." Grainger also reported that its light
manufacturing sales grew in "the high-single digits" in the third
quarter, but its heavy, commercial and natural resources sales were only
up "mid-single digits".
In addition, Fastenal's sales to non-residential
customers have been weaker in 2013, as poor weather plus sequestration
issues hit the commercial and industrial construction markets.
Second, gross margins ran below expectations.
According to Fastenal's December update, this was due to "lower
utilization of our trucking network and lower supplier incentives", and
"the final components relate to product mix (fasteners carry our highest
gross margin and have had a weak 2013) and a very competitive
marketplace".
In fact, fastener sales started 2013 by comprising
42.9% of total sales, but only made up 40.6% at the end of it. However,
on the recent conference call, Fastenal's management outlined that
gross margin is expected to get back to its historical 51%-52% range in
the first quarter, recovering from a disappointing 50.6% in the fourth
quarter of 2013.
The third factor was due to the expansion in store
headcount made in the second half. Earlier in the year, Fastenal had
outlined a plan to hire 600-900 more in-store staff in order to enable
existing managers to increase their sales visits. In addition, there was
a change of approach whereby the company went for quality over quantity
with the expansion of its vending machines; a policy set to be reversed
in 2014. It appears that the sales changes caused some initial
problems, and Fastenal's management was quite upfront on the failure to
execute in the second half.
Where next for Fastenal?
It's a mixed outlook for Fastenal.
It's a mixed outlook for Fastenal.
On the positive side, 2014 it could be a better year for commercial construction,
and the new orders component of the ISM manufacturing index (see above)
indicates that manufacturing growth will be strong in the coming
months. Furthermore, its gross margin looks set to bounce back, while
its sales execution has the potential to improve.
On the downside, the stock remain expensive related to its peers:
Moreover, Grainger and MSC Industrial have the
potential to grow their e-commerce revenues and vending machine sales,
while sales to customers with vending machines already make up 36.6% of
Fastenal's net sales.
In conclusion, the U.S. industrial sector looks
like it will be healthy in 2014, and Fastenal is likely to bounce back,
but there are cheaper ways to buy into the sector than this. The
valuation is still not compelling.
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