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Why Ball Corporation Stock Soared in August

What happened

Shares in beverage can packaging and aerospace component manufacturer Ball Corporation (NYSE: BLL) soared 12.5% in August, according to data provided by S&P Global Market Intelligence. The move is a bit unusual for two reasons.

First, it wasn't really driven by the numbers in the second-quarter earnings (released at the start of the month) or the near-term outlook, but rather by the bullish long-term outlook given by management on the earnings call.

Aluminum beer cans.
Aluminum beer cans.

Image source: Getty Images.

Second, the recurring theme of industrial earnings in 2019 can be roughly characterized as "aerospace good, most other industrial sectors deteriorating." However, it's the growth opportunities in Ball's beverage can packaging operations and outlook that are attracting the attention -- a good thing, because beverage packaging was responsible for 89% of earnings in the first half, with the rest coming from aerospace.

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It's definitely about the long-term outlook, because earnings from overall beverage can packaging in the second quarter actually declined by $5 million to $293 million from the same period last year. CEO John Hayes explained this by saying, "Our North and Central America segment was challenged with previously discussed U.S. aluminum scrap headwinds and sequential project start-up cost."

Moreover, CFO Scott Morrison dampened full-year expectations for earnings before interest, tax, and depreciation (EBITDA) to meet management's target: "With the North American scrap and operational headwinds that we faced in the first half, it makes the full year $2 billion of EBITDA challenging to hit." However, he did say Ball would "exit this year on a $2 billion EBITDA run rate."

Putting the near-term outlook to one side, management's commentary and long-term outlook suggested analysts should significantly upgrade their expectations. A few highlights from Hayes on the earnings call:

  • "We look forward to exceeding our long-term 10% to 15% diluted earnings-per-share growth goal in 2019 and over the next several years."

  • "Growth in our businesses continue[s] at or even above our expectations."

  • Discussing the beverage can packaging business: "We always thought this business to be plus or minus globally about a 2% unit volume growth around the world, and we think it's doubled that."

The increase in growth expectations is being driven by an environmentally friendly move toward aluminum packaging as opposed to plastic and other packaging options.

In fact, the challenge for the company seems to be on building out the capacity to meet future demand -- for example, Senior VP Daniel Fisher said "every plant" in its North America segment was running at full utilization. Capacity upgrades are already in progress, and Morrison served notice that Ball would be ramping up capital expenditures in the future in order to service growth.

So what

Management's bullish outlook seems to be backed by the sustainable trend toward sustainability and other environmental concerns -- the company is even launching an aluminum cup in order to meet anticipated demand. Moreover, the commentary is very positive.

Investors can easily pencil in the impact of the company's exceeding its previously expected 10%-15% EPS growth rate, but Hayes' pronouncement that the long-term growth rate in beverage can packaging should now be seen as 4% rather than 2% suddenly takes Ball from being seen as sub-GDP growth company to looking like one capable of growing its top line in excess of GDP growth -- investors who like growth stocks take note! Throw in some margin expansion along the way and it's not hard to envision some positive scenarios.

Now what

Trading on 26 times analyst expectations for EPS in 2020, Ball Corporation isn't a superficially cheap stock, but if it achieves management's expectation for 15%+ earnings growth in the next few years, then it will surely come into value range at some point. The question is the level of confidence that investors have in the brand-new world of aluminum packaging and even aluminum cups. For now, the market is feeling good about it.

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Lee Samaha has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

This article was originally published on Fool.com