Why CCL Industries Inc. Fell 4.4% on Wednesday

CCL Industries Inc. (TSX:CCL.B) fell 4.4% on Wednesday following the release of its Q2 earnings. Should you buy on the dip? Let’s find out.

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CCL Industries Inc. (TSX:CCL.B), a world leader in specialty label, security, and packaging solutions, announced its second-quarter earnings results after the market closed on Tuesday, and its stock responded by falling 4.4% in Wednesday’s trading session. Let’s take a closer look at the results and the fundamentals of its stock to determine if we should use this weakness as a long-term buying opportunity or wait for an even better entry point in the trading sessions ahead.

Breaking down CCL’s second-quarter performance

Here’s a quick breakdown of 12 of the most notable statistics from CCL’s three-month period ended on June 30, 2017, compared with the same period in 2016:

Metric Q2 2017 Q2 2016 Change
Sales – CCL segment $728.8 million $604.0 million 20.7%
Sales – Avery segment $209.1 million $207.4 million 0.8%
Sales – Checkpoint segment $171.0 million $92.6 million 84.7%
Sales – Innovia segment $91.7 million N/A
Sales – Container segment $52.3 million $56.2 million (6.9%)
Total sales $1,252.9 million $960.2 million 30.5%
Gross profit $378.0 million $281.4 million 34.3%
EBITDA $248.4 million $194.1 million 28%
Operating income $188.3 million $143.1 million 31.6%
Net earnings $109.9 million $72.2 million 52.2%
Adjusted basic earnings per share (EPS) $0.68 $0.56 21.4%
Cash provided by operating activities $177.3 million $89.5 million 98.1%

 Should you buy CCL’s stock on the dip?

It was a fantastic quarter overall for CCL, and it capped off a very strong first half of the year, in which its sales increased 26.7% to $2.31 billion and its adjusted EPS increased 14.7% to $1.25. However, the second-quarter results came up short of the consensus estimates of analysts polled by Thomson Reuters, which called for adjusted EPS of $0.69 on revenue of $1.29 billion, so I think that’s the reason its stock fell by 4.4% on Wednesday.

With all of this being said, I think the 4.4% decline in CCL’s stock represents an attractive entry point for long-term investors for two primary reasons.

First, it’s undervalued. CCL’s stock now trades at just 21.3 times fiscal 2017’s estimated EPS of $2.67 and only 18.7 times fiscal 2018’s estimated EPS of $3.05, both of which are inexpensive compared with its five-year average price-to-earnings multiples of 24.5. These multiples are also inexpensive given its current earnings-growth rate, including its aforementioned 14.7% growth in the first half of 2017, its projected 17.1% growth in the full year of 2017, and its projected 14.2% growth in 2018.

Second, it’s a dividend-growth superstar. CCL pays a quarterly dividend of $0.115 per share, equal to $0.46 per share annually, which gives it a yield of about 0.8%. A 0.8% yield is far from high, but what CCL lacks in yield it makes up for in growth; it has raised its annual dividend payment for 14 consecutive years, and its 15% hike in February has it on track for 2017 to mark the 15th consecutive year with an increase. It’s also important to note that the company has a dividend-payout target of 25% of its adjusted net earnings, so I think its consistently strong earnings growth will allow its streak of annual dividend increases to continue into the late 2020s.

With all of the information provided above in mind, I think all Foolish investors should strongly consider using the post-earnings weakness in CCL Industries to begin scaling in to long-term positions.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Fool contributor Joseph Solitro has no position in any stocks mentioned. CCL Industries is a recommendation of Stock Advisor Canada.

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