Eagle Materials (NYSE: EXP) delivered record fiscal third-quarter results thanks to its most recent acquisition and strong demand for most of its construction-related materials. In addition, the company recorded a significant tax benefit during the quarter relating to the enactment of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act at the end of the quarter. Earnings therefore appeared to grow much faster than they really did, though it was still an excellent quarter for the construction material maker.
Eagle Materials results: The raw numbers
Metric | Fiscal Q3 2018 | Fiscal Q3 2017 | Year-Over-Year Change |
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Revenue | $359.4 million | $302.4 million | 18.8% |
Net earnings | $101.4 million | $56.4 million | 79.8% |
EPS | $2.08 | $1.17 | 77.8% |
Data source: Eagle Materials Inc. EPS=earnings per share.
Image source: Getty Images.
What happened with Eagle Materials this quarter?
Demand was healthy across all its business segments:
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Cement revenue rose 17% from the year-ago period to $161.6 million, in part because of last year's acquisition of the Fairborn, Ohio, plant from Cemex (NYSE: CX). That purchase drove a 6% increase in the net sales price and a 12% increase in sales volume, which combined to grow earnings to a quarterly record of $52.5 million, up 16% from the last year's fiscal third quarter. It's worth noting, however, that without this addition, cement sales prices would have increased only 4% while sales volumes would have declined 2%.
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Concrete and aggregate sales slipped 5% to $38.5 million while operating earnings slumped 26% to $3.4 million. Lower sales volumes resulting from wet weather in Austin, Texas, late in the quarter more than offset record quarterly pricing.
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Revenue from the gypsum wallboard and paperboard segment leaped 11% to $162.6 million. While gypsum wallboard prices slipped 1%, sales volume hit a record 709 million square feet, up 10% year over year. Meanwhile, paperboard sales volume and pricing rose 7% and 11%, respectively, versus the year-ago period.
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Higher oil prices drove a rebound in drilling activities in the U.S., which helped fuel a remarkable 208% revenue increase from Eagle's oil and gas proppants segment to $21.9 million. However, this business unit did report a $1 million loss, mainly because of $5.8 million in depreciation, depletion, and amortization expenses.
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While reported earnings soared 78%, that's mainly because the company recorded a $61 million, or $1.25 per share, tax benefit resulting from the enactment of a lower U.S. corporate tax rate. That more than offset a $39 million charge relating to the settlement of its class action wallboard antitrust litigation. Adjusted for those one-time items, gross profit would have been up 8% year over year, because of the acquisition of the Fairborn plant and improved sales prices across most of its business.