Finding an undervalued stock with a solid story behind
it is always good, but finding that story getting better with time is
even better. That's what appears to be happening with Dana (DAN),
as this diversified supplier of components for passenger, commercial,
and off-highway vehicles continues to execute well on its plan to grow
content, improve margins, and position itself for the evolving demands
of its end-markets.
It can be deceptively easy to
get caught up in and taken along with Wall Street's short attention
span-driven boom-and-doom cycles. With that in mind, I've been cautious
about fundamentally overhauling my long-term growth and profitability
assumptions for the business. I do like Dana's prospects for
value-adding M&A, margin self-improvement, and leveraging a better
mix (including more power tech products down the line), but I don't
believe Dana is going to suddenly become a FCF-generating machine in an
industry where mid-single-digit margins are generally the best that even
great companies (like Cummins (CMI))
can do. To that end, while a fair value in the $20s seems reasonable,
and I'm comfortable modeling exceptional cash flow growth, today's
valuation already seems to be pricing in a lot of progress.
Read more here:
Dana Doing The Right Things And Reaping The Benefits
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