Why Cimpress N.V. Stock Popped 27.7% in February

In This Article:

What happened

Shares of Cimpress N.V. (NASDAQ: CMPR) jumped 27.7% in February, according to data from S&P; Global Market Intelligence, after the mass-customization specialist announced strong fiscal second-quarter results early in the month.

To be sure, Cimpress stock popped over 20% on Feb. 1 alone, when the company revealed that its quarterly revenue had climbed more than 32% year over year to $762.1 million. On the bottom line, net income declined roughly 15% to $29.9 million, or $0.93 per share. But keeping in mind Cimpress no longer provides specific financial guidance -- a consequence of its unique long-term approach for allocating resources with the aim of maximizing shareholder value -- investors were only anticipating earnings of $0.83 per share on revenue of $692.4 million.

Business man handing his card to another person
Business man handing his card to another person

IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

So what

Each of Cimpress' three business segments enjoyed solid growth; revenue at Vistaprint climbed 13% to $428.9 million, sales from Upload and Print operations climbed 26% to $192.5 million, and the top line at National Pen -- which Cimpress acquired for $218 million in late 2016 -- grew 28% on a pro forma basis to $126.1 million.

Cimpress also offered color on its business restructuring over the past year, through which it effectively decentralized its organizational structure and continues to reduce costs with each passing quarter.

"Across Cimpress, we see evidence that the decentralization of the past year is helping us to 'stay small as we get big,'" stated Cimpress CEO Robert Keane. "That organizational change has significantly increased the accountability for key success drivers, including but not limited to customer value improvements, the attraction and motivation of talented team members, the operation of our businesses in a socially responsible manner, and the delivery of attractive returns on investment."

Now what

Cimpress did not provide forward financial guidance, as is usual. But Keane did insist that the company remains on track to deliver on its plans for the rest of the year and is making steady progress "solidifying" its mass-customization industry leadership. So given its strong strong first half and assuming it can sustain that momentum as the fiscal year wears on, I suspect the stock will have more room to rise from here.

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Steve Symington has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Cimpress. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.