The goal of the communications infrastructure firm is to keep people connected through phone, video and wireless devices. There is a Hickory, North Carolina firm that has been a pretty good operator along that line, but it just made a deal to acquire a successful competitor and will be getting even better.
CommScope Inc. (NYSE: CTV) designs and manufactures electronic, coaxial and fiber-optic cable products for data networking, Internet access, wireless communications, telephony and other broadband applications. Among its offerings are high-bandwidth cables that deliver television, telephone and Internet access through a single line. CommScope cables are also used in local area networks, residential video wiring and antennae to transmitter linking. Further, the firm is a leading provider of coaxial cable for satellite television providers. Comcast (NASDAQ: CMCSA) is a major customer. Corning (NYSE: GLW) is a major competitor.
The company surprised the Street last week, when it raised Q2 revenue guidance to $500-$510 million from prior guidance
of $490-$510 million. Analysts had been looking for $499.9 million. The same day, CommScope also announced the acquisition of communications infrastructure firm Andrew Corporation (NASDAQ: ANDW). Friedman Billings, Oppenheimer and Robert Baird subsequently made positive comments about the strategic aspects of the move. The stock popped into the initial stage of a bullish "pennant" consolidation pattern on the news. Prices frequently exit pennants moving in the same direction they were traveling when they entered them. In this case, that would be to the upside.
Brokers recommend the issue with six "strong buys," three "buys" and two "holds." Analysts expect a 15% average annual growth rate through the next five years. The CTV Price to Sales ratio (2.09), Price to Cash Flow ratio (18.01), Price to Free Cash Flow ratio (30.02), Sales Growth rate (23.63%), EPS Growth rate (200.00%), Return on Assets (11.46%) and Return on Equity (23.57%) compare favorably with industry, sector and S&P 500 averages.
Institutional investors hold about 95% of the outstanding shares. The stock is one of those used to calculate the S&P 400 MidCap Index. Over the past 52 weeks, it has traded between $27 and $59.82. A stop-loss of $51.50 looks good here. Note that the firm is expected to report Q2 results late this month.
Larry Schutts is a contributing editor for Theflyonthewall.com and the Vice-President of Stockwinners.com.