Unmanned aerial
vehicles (UAVs) had their starting point in military exercises, carrying
surveillance cameras and even bombs to sensitive sites. Drones as we have come to call them have also
zoomed across the horizons of adventuresome consumers, who see sport and
entertainment possibilities. However, drones
offer time and cost savings, quality and accuracy in data gathering and safety
to a host of scientists, engineers and infrastructure operators.
According to
industry research firm Markets and Markets, the unmanned aerial market is
estimated to be $13.2 billion in the current year and has the potential to
reach $28.3 billion by 2022. A good
share of the 13.5% compound annual growth is expected to be driven by new
demand for agricultural and environmental applications. Indeed, Price Waterhouse Coopers estimates
the addressable market for drones in the agriculture market alone could reach
$32.2 billion by 2025. The PWC market
size estimate seems to eclipse Markets and Markets figures. At least Markets and Markets agrees that
agriculture is the dominant growth driver for UAVs, with an estimated 30%
compound annual growth estimate for the this sector through 2022.
While UAVs might
not rise to the level of the electron microscope as a breakthrough technology
enabling transformative innovation, it is a tool that could deliver significant
energy savings and economic benefits. For
investors with a focus in energy, environment or conservation, a stake in a UAV
producer should be interesting.
Small UAVs have
reached a price level delivering a cost effective way to collect high
resolution images that can inform farmers, animal control personnel or environmentalists. UAVs can be deployed rapidly to even the most
remote locations. Farmers can detect
water and nutritional stress or monitor insect damage. Wildlife authorities can observe poaching
activity in real time, giving them the chance to capture perpetrators in the
act. Scientists are gaining access to
data on plants and animals in even the most remote and inaccessible terrain or
conditions.
Aerovironment (AVAV: Nasdaq) has had a berth in our Mothers of
Invention Index of companies offering innovative
technologies that save energy or otherwise impact resource utilization. It is the
largest supplier of UAVs to the U.S. military and is gaining a reputation
around the world as a producer of reliable commercial drones. The company offers a half dozen different UAV
models, from the solar-powered Helios
with its 247 foot wingspan to the ‘bird-sized’ Nano Air Vehicle. The Raven was originally deployed by the
U.S. military, but is also useful in commercial applications as well. With a wingspan of 4.5 feet and total weight
of 4.2 pounds, the Raven can be launch by hand and deliver aerial observations
up to 10 kilometers by either a daylight or infrared camera.
The company
delivered $253.3 million in total sales in the twelve months ending July 2016,
providing $4.3 million in net income or $0.18 per share. As much as 4.2% of sales were converted to
operating cash flow during this period, helping bring cash on the balance sheet
to $224.1 million. Aerovironment has no
debt and is able to use its ample internally generated cash for new product
development.
AVAV has a
follow of at least a half dozen analysts who have published estimates of its
future sales and earnings. In the
quarter ending July 2016, Aerovironment disappointed investors with a deeper
than expected loss. The bad news caused
analysts to trim expectations for the quarter ending October 2016, but
long-term expectations remained intact. The
consensus for the current fiscal year ending April 2017 is for $0.52 in
earnings per share on about $290 million in sales.
Financial results
for the October quarter are expected the first full week in December 2016. Expect analyst to ask management about its
most recent product innovation, the Quantix,
which was introduced at the Drone World Expo in California. Quantix
has been designed to deliver efficiency and convenience. It can collect high-resolution images on at
least 400 acres of land during a single flight and then transmit the data to a
cloud-service. Users can access the data
through a companion tablet. The Quantix model is aimed primarily at,
guess who - farmers! Anyone who has ever had to walk a corn field
looking for signs of drought or bugs will understand the appeal of a fast
moving drone with a high resolution camera.
Not yet priced, Quantix is expected to contribute to revenue in last
fiscal year 2017 or early fiscal year 2018.
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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