3 Industrial Stocks Trading Below the GF Value Line

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- By Nathan Parsh

The S&P 500 continues to trade with an elevated earnings multiple, making finding securities that are trading at a discount to their intrinsic value a difficult endeavor.

However, there are still some deeply discounted stocks in the market place, if you know where to look. Fortunately, GuruFocus has some tools to help investors do just that.


One of the newer features at GuruFocus is the GF Fair Value Line, which seeks to estimate the intrinsic value of a stock based on the following factors:

  • Historical multiples, including price-earnings and price-to-free-cash-flow.

  • A GuruFocus adjustment factor based on the company's past returns and growth.

  • Future estimates of the business performance.



In this article, we will look at three dividend-paying Industrial stocks trading below their GF Value, all of which have at least double-digit total return potential by my estimations.

Apogee Enterprises, Inc.

Apogee Enterprises, Inc (NASDAQ:APOG) is a construction company that operates four business units: Architectural Framing Systems, Architectural Glass, Architectural Services and Large-Scale Optical Technologies. The company has a market capitalization of $861.5 million and generated revenue of $1.4 billion in fiscal 2020 (the company's fiscal year concludes at the end of February).

Apogee Enterprises has raised its dividend for the past nine years. The dividend's compound annual growth rate is 8.6% since 2010. The company increased its dividend by 7.1% for the Feb. 18 payment. With an annualized dividend of $0.75 and a current share price of $32.65, Apogee Enterprises yields 2.3% today. For context, the stock has an average yield of 1.3% over the last five years. The current yield is also superior to the average yield of 1.6% for the S&P 500 index.

According to analysts surveyed by Yahoo Finance, Apogee Enterprises is expected to earn $2.34 per share in fiscal 2021. Based on the most recent closing price, the stock has a forward price-earnings ratio of 14. For comparison purposes, the stock has an average price-earnings ratio of 20.9 since 2010. Apogee Enterprises traded rather erratically in the beginning part of the last decade. The average price-earnings ratio declines to 16.6 when looking at just the last five years. This seems to be a more reasonable valuation target looking at the history of Apogee Enterprises.

That said, the stock still looks cheap on an historical basis. Apogee Enterprises also trades at a discount to its GF Value: