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Is 3M Stock a Buy Now?

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3M (NYSE: MMM) was once considered a stable blue chip stock, but major problems weighed down its shares in recent years. The diversified conglomerate struggled with sluggish sales in a chilly macro environment, safety-related recalls, and thousands of lawsuits related to its production and dumping of harmful chemicals.

The company also cut its dividend in 2024, which ended its long reign as a Dividend King, and in April, it spun off its healthcare division as Solventum (NYSE: SOLV). After ups and downs over the past five years, its stock is up by just 20% or so, while the S&P 500 has rallied by about 90%. On a total return basis (with dividends included), the index's performance has still more than doubled the conglomerates.

3M's headquarters in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Image source: 3M.

However, 3M's business has gradually stabilized over the past year. With that in mind, should investors buy 3M's stock as a value play today and expect the company to overcome its challenges in the next few years?

Why did 3M underperform the market?

3M sells more than 60,000 products for the industrial, worker safety, and consumer goods markets. It develops adhesives, abrasives, laminates, films, personal protection equipment, auto care products, and even electronic circuits. Its most well-known consumer brands include Scotch Tape, Scotchguard, and Post-It Notes.

Metric

2021

2022

2023

2024

Organic sales growth

8.8%

1.2%

(3.2%)

1.2%

Operating margin

20.8%

19.1%

(43.4%)

19.6%

Data source: 3M.

3M's sales grew rapidly in 2021 amid the economic recovery from the earlier phases of the pandemic. But in 2022 and 2023, it suffered a slowdown as inflation, rising interest rates, and geopolitical conflicts rattled the global economy.

Those headwinds mainly impacted its safety and industrial, transportation and electronics, and consumer divisions; its healthcare segment (now Solventum) was largely resistant to them.

As 3M's sales growth slowed, its margins were crushed by its soaring legal costs. First, it has been incrementally paying a $6 billion settlement from 2023 to 2029 for selling defective combat earplugs. Second, it has agreed to pay $14 billion over the next decade to clean up U.S. drinking water supplies contaminated by PFAS (perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances), also known as "forever chemicals" because they take centuries or millennia to break down naturally in the environment. 3M has been manufacturing these chemicals for decades, and they've been linked to numerous health risks. Also, insurance giant AIG (NYSE: AIG), which provided liability coverage to 3M, is suing the conglomerate and refusing to cover any of those payments.