November 22, 2021 BARRON’S 27
B
ottlenecks and supply shortages have caused
major problems forLCI Industries,which
makes parts for recreational vehicles and
boats. Those problems are starting to ease—
and that could be the catalyst for a higher
stock price.
Shortages and supply-chain snarls have
hit many manufacturing companies, particularly small
ones, where it hurts—their profit margins. The median
operating margins for the S&P 600 small-capitalization
stock index decreased to 8.9% in the third quarter, down
from 10% in the second.
LCI Industries (ticker: LCII) saw its own margin drop
from 8.6% to 7.6%. But those supply-chain problems are
easing—and LCI, whose brands include Taylor Made
boat parts and Thomas Payne RV furniture, is a prime
beneficiary.
Management has taken steps aimed at ensuring that
margins recover, by continuing to shift its focus from
selling parts to RV and boat manufacturers to the more
profitable aftermarket business—selling replacement
parts.
As a result, the company, which has a stock market
capitalization of $4 billion, could return to previous lev-
els of profitability. That could push the stock, which
closed at a record $156.91 on Friday, to new highs.
It’s difficult to overstate just how much LCI, also
known as Lippert, has been hurt by the shortages. Rising
input costs shaved about five percentage points off its
gross margin, which fell to 21.6% during the just-ended
third quarter, from 26.8% in the same 2020 period.
total sales in 2018. In 2020, the num-
ber jumped to 22.5%, and it should
only get larger.
Sales of new boats and RVs surged
in the pandemic, and a slowdown in
the company’s original equipment
business could hurt the stock.
At the same time, all of those new
vehicles will need replacement parts.
“We’re entering a period where
you’regoingtohavemorethings
break down and need to be re-
placed,” says Daniel Moore, an ana-
lyst at CJS Securities. “You should
see really good [aftermarket] growth.
While a fifth of the company’s
business currently comes from the
aftermarket, LCI’s chief financial
officer, Brian Hall, wants to increase
the replacement parts’ share of sales
to 25% by 2023.
Helping to drive that growth, Hall
says, is that large distributors are
beginning to take over mom-and-pop
parts dealers. Small dealers typically
orderasinglepartuponrequest
from a vehicle owner, but larger dis-
tributors buy different products—
andmoreofthem—tomakethem
available to consumers at any given
moment.
To expand its aftermarket offer-
ings, LCI has been acquiring new
businesses, such as CURT Group, a
trailer-hitch maker it bought for
$340 million in 2019. The operating
margin in LCI’s aftermarket business
hit 11.4% in the third quarter, versus
just 6.8% for the rest of its business.
Lower input costs and the contin-
ued expansion of aftermarket busi-
ness means that LCI’s sales and
earnings could grow faster than cur-
rently predicted. Analysts expect the
company’s sales to grow 9% in 2022,
to $4.8 billion, and earnings to climb
17%, to $12.69 a share.
Still, the Street expects LCI’s earn-
ings to fall to $11.31 a share in 2023—
a number that’s far too low if the
company can hit $5 billion of sales
that year, says Truist Securities ana-
lyst Michael Swartz. With the com-
pany expected to boost margins to
something closer to 9%, earnings
could hit $13 a share or more.
“[We]believetheworstisnow
behind LCI and that we could actu-
ally see upside to margins in coming
quarters,” Swartz says. “We remain
constructive on the [long term] story
and believe sentiment should im-
prove, given the more favorable cost/
price dynamic set to unfold in com-
ing quarters.”
At the current 12.4 times 12-month
estimated earnings—below the five-
year average of 15.2 times—LCI stock
would be worth $161 a share, 2.6%
above Friday’s close. But an increase
to 14 times would make the shares
worth$182,up16%fromFriday’s
close, says CJS Securities’ Moore,
though it may take some patience
before it plays out.
One advantage that LCI has:
Unlike many other small-cap compa-
nies, it pays a dividend, currently
yielding about 2.3%. So, investors
willgetpaidtowait.B
ABoatandRVPartsMaker
With Dual Profit Engines
LCI Industries could be a prime beneficiary of easing supply-chain bottlenecks.
Better yet, it has embarked on a smart expansion into aftermarket parts.
Those problems are starting to
ease, LCI management said during
the company’s third-quarter earnings
call, and it guided fourth-quarter
operating margins up by one to 1.5
percentage points above third-
quarter levels. That’s one reason
LCI stock has rallied 10% since its
Nov. 2 earnings report.
LCI isn’t just counting on lower
materials costs and other supply-
chain problems slowly easing. It has
bet big on the aftermarket, which has
historically been a small part of its
business, accounting for just 9.4% of
LCI Industries
RV- and boat-component manufacturer
Headquarters:Elkhart, Indiana
YTD Change:19%
Market Value(bil):$3.9
2022E Sales(bil):$4.8
2022E Net Income(mil):$328
2022E EPS:$12.69
2022E P/E:12.1
Recent Price:$154.21
Dividend Yield:2.3%
E=estimate.
LCII / NYSE
2019 ’20 ’21
60
80
100
120
140
$160
Source: FactSet
By JACOB SONENSHINE
SIZING UP SMALL-CAPS
Illustration by Alex Fine