KBR 10% Selloff Presents Buying Opportunity

Loading...
Loading...

Deutsche Bank believes the recent selloff in KBR, Inc. KBR is overdone and upgraded the stock to Buy from Hold, saying "the stock could reach $20-25 (45-80% upside) over the longer term (>12M)."

Driven by the 2016 EPS guidance cut, shares of KBR fell 10 percent on Monday to close the day's trading at $13.63. They have dropped 21 percent in the last year.

Analyst Chad Dillard noted that Monday's 10 percent selloff is "overdone, backward-looking and suggests the market under-appreciates KBR's transformation to a lower-risk gov't/technical services firm." Dillard also raised his price target to $16 from $14.

Related Link: KBR Shares React To Friday's Precipitous Cut In Guidance

"KBR now trades at a ~15% discount, near where it traded prior to the mgmt/strategy change, implying the market gives no credit to KBR's new strategic approach," Dillard wrote in a note.

This indicates that the market still considers KBR as a high risk oil & gas EPC contractor, generating most of its earnings from LNG. However, post the acquisition of government service companies Wyle and HTSI, it is becoming a lower risk gov't/technical services company.

"We estimate KBR can generate $1.50-$1.80 in normalized earnings by 2020 driven by cost savings, share gains in Government services and an improving product mix," Dillard highlighted.

In addition, Dillard says most of the near-term risk is already factored into the share price.

Further, the analyst noted that there is potential for multiple to rerate upwards as despite KBR's transformation towards a gov't/technical services company, which typically trades at 15x earnings, it currently trades like an E&C stock (11x earnings).

Loading...
Loading...
Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs
date
ticker
name
Price Target
Upside/Downside
Recommendation
Firm
Posted In: Analyst ColorUpgradesPrice TargetAnalyst RatingsChad DillardDeutsche Bank
Benzinga simplifies the market for smarter investing

Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.

Join Now: Free!

Loading...