Passenger vehicles and non-residential building are two sectors that have seen some pretty ugly conditions in recent memory, and that certainly showed up in a 25% revenue decline for Johnson Controls (NYSE:JCI) in 2009. Economic conditions have turned around, though, and the company has seen a strong rebound in its results. Now with signs of life in the building efficiency segment, could even better results be on the way for shareholders?
A Mixed Fiscal Second Quarter
Like so many other companies this quarter, Johnson Controls gave investors a mix of good news and some disappointment in its fiscal second quarter results. Revenue jumped 22% and was comfortably above even the high end of the range, as all units posted solid progress. The auto business led with over 25% growth, but even the building efficiency segment saw better than 18% improvement from last year. (For more, see Johnson Controls Sitting Well.)
Margins were more problematic, though. Gross margin ticked down 20 basis points, due largely to commodity inflation and product mix. Segment income did improve by over 30% and all segments did show year-on-year improvements in their operating margins. Unfortunately, analysts had expected even better improvement, particularly in the building segment. So while patient shareholders may not be too bothered or disappointed with 30% segment income growth, the short-term trading tenor may be negative.
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