This Stock Could DOUBLE, Thanks to 2 Little-Known Regulatory Changes

Whenever assessing a stock's long-term growth potential, investors also need to focus on the hurdles the company must overcome before growth can take off. If you're talking about a major technological or regulatory change, for example, then an ample amount of ground work needs to be laid before the stars align.

For environmental services company Calgon Carbon (NYSE: CCC), that groundwork has been laid for the past four years, and the company should soon reap the benefits. Meanwhile, shareholders have yet to benefit. The stock has traded a few dollars north or south of $15 during the last four years, though a move up into the mid-$20s appears increasingly plausible.


Meanwhile, downside appears quite limited -- just my kind of stock. That's why I'm adding this company to my $100,000 Real-Money Portfolio.

Air and water
As its name implies, Calgon Carbon produces carbon in various forms to either scrub power-plants of key airborne pollutants or disinfect both drinking water and waste water. Across the map, countries have been seeking to clean up their act, which has fueled decent, though unspectacular, growth for this company.



Growth in each of the company's two main segments has actually been a bit more erratic than that trajectory implies. Demand for air scrubbing carbon spiked nicely higher as power plants were retrofitted to cut emissions of mercury, sulfur dioxide and other airborne pollutants. But the company's UV-based water filtration systems have seen relatively flat demand as municipal budgets were slashed during the recent economic slowdown.

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These divisions carry disparate profit margins, which helps explain why Calgon Carbon's profit growth has been more subdued in the past two years.



Yet both of these segments stand to benefit from looming regulatory changes that were announced in December 2011. The most important move: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced on Dec. 21 that it will implement the Mercury and Air Toxic Standards Act (also known as the Maximum Achievable Control Technology Act, or MACT).

This could impact up to half of our nation's 1,300 coal-fired power units. (One power station can have several units.) The act gives utilities up to four years to comply, though incentives are in place to act much sooner. Calgon Carbon's powdered activated carbon (PAC) should see steadily rising demand late this year and into 2013 and 2014.

The company also stands to benefit from an EPA decision to require all ships that navigate U.S. waters to implement water ballast treatment systems . This comes after the devastation of sensitive ecosystems in the Great Lakes and elsewhere from Zebra Mussels and other organisms that are inadvertently picked up in other parts of the world.