Chicago Bridge & Iron Is Building A Promising Future

Chicago Bridge & Iron (CBI) has had a 22% rise since I first recommended buying the stock in December of 2009. The company recently reported results for the full year 2009. For 2009 total revenue was $4.6 billion dollars. Net income came in at $174.3 million dollars and earnings per share was $1.79. Chicago Bridge & Iron picked up over $3.4 billion in contracts in the fourth quarter and $6.1 billion dollars in new contracts for the full year. According to CEO Phillip Asherman, CB&I has over $300 million in cash and a backlog of $7.2 billion in orders.

The stock still looks like it has upside. The balance sheet is solid and shares still look cheap selling at just 13 times this years earnings. CB&I is selling at a .41 price to sales ratio. To be fair Chicago Bridge & Iron’s price to book ratio is definitely not cheap with a value of 2.7.  Management appears to be doing a solid job managing a 24.4% return on equity for 2009. The company tempered investor expectations for 2010 by guiding earnings downward. Any upside surprise in earnings for the current year and shares should rise. The real earnings story for CB&I is in 2011 when the average EPS is $2.15 meaning that the stock is trading at just over 10 times next years earnings. I have been long Chicago Bridge & Iron since last year and will continue to buy shares as long as the stock stays south of $24.

Photo by laffy4k

Manitowoc

I forgot to post this on Friday. Bought 200 shares of Manitowoc (MTW) in after hours trading on Friday at $9.44 per share. Manitowoc’s primary business is manufacturing and selling cranes. The company’s shares have been punished by the economic recession. Manitowoc has $382 million in cash and only 247 million in debt. Manitowoc has almost $3 per share in cash on the balance sheet and is selling at a discount to book value. It may take some time but shares should rebound with increased spending on infrastructure.