Tetra
Tech’s (TTEK: NASDAQ)
quarter earnings report last week was met with high drama as traders reacted
with surprisingly vehement disappointment over the recent financial performance
of the engineering and technology business.
The company’s stock price gapped down in the first day of trading
following the announcement, falling through a significant line of price
support. The shares continued to fall
and finished the week at a price not seen since mid-April 2017 before the stock
began its recent drive higher.
Tetra Tech Coastal and Marine Resources Management |
The drama unfolded after Tetra Tech reported net earnings of $0.52 per
share on $498 million in total sales in the quarter ending June 2017. This compares to the
consensus estimate of $0.54 EPS and $535.2 million in sales. The two penny ‘miss’ was apparently seen as
egregious despite the fact that reported results represented solid year-over-year
growth rates in the high teens.
We believe investors may have overreacted to the
news, but certainly the company is not performing as well as was expected as
traders bid the stock to a new 52-week high price of $48.35 in the run up to
the earnings report. Trading in the week
prior to the earnings report may have been unjustifiably exuberant and in the
earnings miss an equally strong reaction was to be expected.
If not an earnings miss, perhaps it was management’s guidance that
caused investor indigestion.
Management’s guidance for
the year is expected to be $2.10 to $2.12 in earnings per share on sales in a
range of $2.0 billion to $2.02 billion.
This is below the prevailing expectation for sales near $2.05 billion
and earnings of $2.17 per share. The
difference is due in part to the disappointment in the June quarter, but also
implies lower than expected results in the fourth quarter as well. Even if
investors could accept the two-penny earnings miss, failing to deliver strong
guidance will not be taken lightly.
The sensitivity of investors to Tetra Tech’s
earnings may inject unnecessary volatility into the stock performance. As a consulting and engineering firm focused
on the environment, water and energy, Tetra Tech is bound to experience quarterly
variance in earnings. Contracts get
delayed. Weather impedes work schedules.
The company is also a frequent recipient of contract awards from
government and quasi-government agencies.
The pace of publicly funded programs, which tend to be years in the
making and almost as long in execution, is not always in sync with the
three-month cycles that govern investor thinking.
Tetra Tech shares are likely to eventually
recover. The company frequently reports its progress with market penetration
through contract announcements that serve as strong catalysts for the stock
price. Just this week Tetra Tech
announced the receipt of a contract valued at $60 million from the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
The contract extends over the next five years to provide technical and
analytical services to evaluate the ecology and health risks in fresh, ground
and sea water.
The steady drumbeat of contract awards tends to
sooth the insult that investors might have felt subsequent to the earnings
announcement. They also tend to cause
the stock to run up as the quarter unfolds only to deflate again when the
earnings announcement fails to meet expectations. Tetra Tech’s engineering and technology
service menu is appealing for investors interesting in a stake in environmental
clean-up, but the business model also a bit of price volatility along the way.
Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist
web log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest
in the companies mentioned herein.
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