The 1 Big Risk With Brink's Company's Growth Strategy

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Founded in 1859 by Perry Brink to transport valuables around Chicago, Brink's Company (NYSE: BCO) is now a cash-management solutions powerhouse, with almost 12,000 trucks on the streets safely transporting cash and valuables for customers in 41 countries. At a time when cash transactions are slowly declining and most of the financial-technology world is trying to find ways to digitize currency, Brink's continues to make steady profits by providing operations such as transporting cash in armored trucks, maintaining and funding ATMs, and offering cash-management and dispensing services.

In the company's recently reported fourth quarter, revenue rose to $903 million, a 12% increase year over year, while non-GAAP earnings per share grew to $0.95, an 8% increase year over year. The EPS results included a theft of $11 million in December, which impacted EPS by about $0.14.

Metric

Q4 2017

Q4 2016

Change

Revenue

$903 million

$804 million

12%

Earnings per share (non-GAAP)

$0.95

$0.88

8%

Total debt

$612 million

$247 million

148%

Data source: Brink's Company.

The company is growing by continually scanning a fragmented market looking for acquisition targets that will be accretive to earnings almost immediately upon purchase. The strategy has worked well over the past year, as shares are up more than 41%, even after the recent decline. Yet cracks in the company's armor are beginning to show. Debt continues to march upward while earnings growth is slowing.

Is Brink's Company pursuing the right strategy? Let's take a closer look at the company's plan for growth to determine whether the company is making smart choices with its use of cash flow.

Armored truck parked on a city street.
Armored truck parked on a city street.

Brink's provides cash-management services such as cash-in-transit, ATM replenishment and maintenance, and payment services. Image source: Getty Images.

Growth through acquisitions

In 2017, Brink's Company spent $365 million on a total of six acquisitions; this past January, it announced its acquisition of Rodoban, a Brazil-based cash-managing company, for $145 million. And CEO Douglas Pertz's comments on the company's latest conference call, transcribed by S&P Global Market Intelligence, suggest Brink's is hardly finished targeting smaller acquisitions:

Our acquisition growth plans or what we call Strategy 1.5 put a high priority on acquisitions in our core businesses and in our core geographies -- our current geographies that we're in, with the second priority on core business acquisitions in adjacent geographies. We have a strong pipeline of core acquisition targets that offer new opportunities to increase route density, add new customers and capture cross synergies with attractive margins.