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A Quickie With BWX Technologies

Aug. 22, 2019 5:23 AM ET
Please Note: Blog posts are not selected, edited or screened by Seeking Alpha editors.

Summary

  • Steam is the result.
  • How it is made is the question.
  • Where to from here.

My Disclaimer

I am not a licensed or registered investment professional. I hold no shares of any company or companies mentioned in this post. I do not follow any company or companies mentioned in this post.

Risk

Past and future gains contained in this post are based on actual and anticipated earnings, actual and anticipated dividends, and actual and anticipated price appreciation. Valuations, while given as a specific amount, are always within a valuation range. Investors should be aware that any investment has the potential for loss, and past performance is no guarantee of future results.

Intent

I could waste a lot of your time with graphs, charts, and other assorted worthless information all intended to show you that I know something about something when it comes to this company, but the truth is, I know very little about this company. My intent with this post, is to provide you with a brief overview of my various company valuations, all based on the company’s most recent 10-K filing, so you can determine if you have any investment interest.

What They Do

BWX Technologies is a manufacturer of nuclear components, a developer of nuclear technologies and a nuclear power service provider focusing on the design and manufacture of close-tolerance equipment for nuclear applications, providing various services to the U.S. Government, including special nuclear materials processing, environmental site restoration services and management and operating services for various U.S. Government-owned facilities, and designing and manufacturing commercial nuclear steam generators, heat exchangers, pressure vessels and other auxiliary equipment. Industry peers include Amex Foster Wheeler LTD, Areva, and Bechtel National, Inc..

Short-Term Target

My current short-term target for the stock is $55.09, with an initial trailing stop set at $56.15. Based on a recent price of $57.01, upward price movement will find resistance at $57.03 and again at $57.77. Downward price movement will find support at $52.84 and again at $50.98, with final support found at $49.62.

Volatility

There are many different metrics available to help investors determine the theoretical volatility of a stock as compared to the volatility of the entire market. To me, the beta ratio is the metric that is the most representative of a stock’s volatility. A beta ratio of less than 1 means that the security’s price will be less volatile than the market, while a beta ratio greater than 1 indicates that the security’s price will be more volatile than the market. My current beta ratio for this stock is 1.03.

Quality of Earnings

A company’s earnings can be impacted by sources unrelated to the company’s day to day operations. These unrelated sources will distort a company’s earnings and consequently its fair value. Investors should always explore the sources of a company’s earnings to better understand potential valuation impacts. Considering the company’s earnings, 0% of net income came from tax benefits, while 0% of net income came from sources unrelated to day to day operations.

Momentum Target

My momentum target for the stock is $59. Momentum targets are determined by integrating a company’s most recent annual EPS and year-over-year earnings growth, with the current yield of a 10-year treasury. Momentum investing often requires investors to trade in stocks that have already enjoyed significant gains while making no allowances for overall market corrections or the sustainability of a company’s earnings.

Growth Target

My growth target for the stock is $63. Growth targets are determined using a company’s year-over-year earnings growth, year-over-year PE growth, and year-over-year price growth.

Five Year Growth of $10K

If you had invested $10K in this stock five years ago (12/31/13), you would have received 408.83 shares of stock with a cost basis of $24.46 per share. Had you held the stock for five years and then closed your position (12/31/2018), you would have closed at $38.23 per share. During that holding period you would have collected $180.93 in regular and special dividends, and your initial $10K investment would have returned to you $15,630, a gain of 56% excluding regular and special dividends.

Cost of Common Equity

The cost of common equity is the minimum annual rate of return an investor should expect to earn when investing in shares of a particular company. I calculate this by adding the thirty-year treasury yield to the beta ratio for the stock multiplied by my default equity risk premium. My cost of common equity for this stock is 5.12%.

Insider Transactions

The SEC classifies insiders as “management, officers or any beneficial owners with more than 10% class of a company’s security.” Insiders are required to abide by certain rules and fill out SEC forms every time they buy or sell company shares. In addition, to prevent insider trading, or benefiting illegally from material non-public information that their positions give them access to, the law prevents insiders from deposing of shares within six months of their purchase. This effectively bars insiders from profiting from quick trades based on their “insider” knowledge.

Over the past 12 months, the company has recorded 65 insider trades involving 409,877 shares of stock. Of those 65 insider trades, 30 were Buys involving 243,531 shares of stock, and 35 were Sells involving 166,346 shares of stock, creating an insider buy to sell ratio of roughly 1.5 to 1.

Prior Average Valuations

My average valuation for the prior five year period of FY 2013 through FY 2017 was $28. The stock price during that time period averaged $36, earnings averaged $1.39 per share, and the average PE Ratio was 26. The current PE Ratio is 18.

Enterprise and Equity Value

As a fair value investor, I am looking for companies that have low debt and generate lots of cash. To me, the easiest way to highlight a company’s ability to generate cash is to compare the Enterprise Value to the Equity Value, what I call my E2E Ratio. What I am looking for with this ratio is something close to or above 1, meaning the company generates cash at a rate equal to or faster than it generates debt. For this company my enterprise value (market cap plus debt less cash) is $65 and my equity value (market cap plus cash less debt) is $49, making my E2E Ratio, 0.76.

Fair Value Investing

Fair value investing, more commonly known as value investing, requires investors to consider a company’s overall financial condition including past and future earnings growth, free cash flow, both book and tangible book values, net current asset value, and many other valuation metrics. My most recent fair value estimate for the stock as an on-going concern is $34. My worksheet target prices are derivatives of my fair value estimate.

BWX Technologies, Inc. (NYSE: BWXT) – FYE 12/2018 – OVER VALUED – The stock is currently trading at levels above my most recent $55 terminate target. Please see linked PDF worksheet.

There you are, short and to the point.

WaxRevised on 08/21/19

Analyst's Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.

Seeking Alpha's Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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