FINWIRES · TerminalLIVE
FINWIRES

CIBC Maintains ATCO's Outperformer Rating and C$72 Price Target

-- CIBC Capital Markets on Thursday maintained its Outperformer rating and C$72 price target on the shares of ATCO (ACO-X.TO) after hosting a fireside chat with Adam Beattie, President of ATCO's Structures and Katie Patrick, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Investment Officer of ATCO Ltd., to discuss ACO's Structures & Logistics (S&L) business. The bank said it had also done a "deeper dive" on S&L, and ATCO remains "a top pick".

CIBC said that, overall, the company update reinforced its "constructive view" on S&L given multiple policy/industry tailwinds that should help drive durable and more diversified growth.

"That said," it added, "ACO.X's commentary alone may not be sufficient to sway the marginal buyer of the stock -- limitations on disclosures could temper near-term re-rating potential despite a favourable demand backdrop and solid execution to date."

CIBC said multiple tailwinds support a "positive outlook", noting that S&L benefits from multiple demand drivers, including Canada's support for large infrastructure projects (energy export buildout), rising defence spending, mineral extraction activity, and growing commercial and residential housing needs. "Modular housing could become more meaningful -- we believe ACO.X should be competitive in the Canadian military housing tender (strong history of serving defence) in the next year," the bank added.

CIBC further noted that, in the U.S., there's "material runway to scale and grow" into new regions/markets as reshoring and the data centre buildout drive demand. It noted there are also strong data centre tailwinds in Australia.

"Data centres were flagged as increasingly attractive given improving economics and longer rental durations (typically 36-48+ months vs. 6-36 months for traditional rentals)," said CIBC. Currently holding only about 2% U.S. market share (representing 15% of S&L revenue), ATCO is well positioned to expand in this end market, the bank added.

CIBC noted that ATCO emphasized that industrial (infrastructure, construction, resources) should continue to provide a "resilient, high-margin earnings base", while commercial and residential modular growth "should accelerate (off a smaller base)". CIBC said while margins in the latter will be lower near term, it said it does not expect material EBITDA margin contraction for S&L, with top line growth supporting earnings growth. "Further, we do not expect a step up in capex to support this growth (should remain in line with recent levels), and the strong growth can largely be leveraged off existing manufacturing capacity," added CIBC. "Trailing 3-year CAGRs (2022-2025) for revenue/EBITDA are 11%/26%."

CIBC forecasts 3-year CAGRs for 2025-2028E for revenue/EBITDA of 8%/9%. It added that its revenue forecast could be conservative.

CIBC noted ATCO reiterated its view that S&L is undervalued at current prices which is a view the bank shares. CIBC believes "enhanced disclosures (e.g. a backlog or explicit revenue/margin targets) could help", but noted ACTO seems reluctant to provide.

(covers equity, commodity and economic research from major banks and research firms in North America, Asia and Europe. Research providers may contact us here: https://www..com/contact-us)

Price: $72.28, Change: $+2.18, Percent Change: +3.11%

Related Articles

Oil & Energy

EMEA Oil Update: Brent Ease as Trump Extends Ceasefire

Crude futures eased on Wednesday as the US extended its ceasefire with Iran, temporarily stalling a direct military escalation.The Brent futures contract slipped 0.8% to $97.74 per barrel. Murban closed at $96.29 on April 21 and was not trading as of the time of publishing this oil price update.US President Donald Trump said Tuesday that he extended the ceasefire with Iran while maintaining a blockade, as negotiations remain uncertain.Trump said in a Truth Social post, "... upon the request of Field Marshal Asim Munir, and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, of Pakistan, we have been asked to hold our Attack on the Country of Iran until such time as their leaders and representatives can come up with a unified proposal."Trump said the US blockade would be maintained, signaling continued pressure, and also indicated that talks remain conditional on Iran presenting a clear negotiating position.While President Trump delayed military action against Iran at Pakistan's request, the continued closure of the Strait of Hormuz is suppressing global demand."The conflict is curbing supply, with demand destruction near 4 million barrels per day and possibly rising to 5 million mainly impacting Asia," Saxo Bank analysts said.On the supply side, data from the American Petroleum Institute revealed Tuesday that US crude oil inventories declined by 4.40 million barrels in the week ended April 17.The oil market now awaits the US Energy Information Administration's petroleum inventory report, scheduled for release on Wednesday.

Asia

Market Chatter: Malaysia Postpones Planned Carbon Tax Amid Middle East Worries

Malaysia has delayed its planned carbon tax implementation, citing ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, The Star reported Tuesday, citing Natural Resources and Environmental Sustainability Minister, Arthur Joseph Kurup.The tax, which was previously expected to start this year for sectors such as iron, steel and energy, has been deferred to avoid adding pressure on industries and consumers. Kurup said the government will instead prioritize setting up a carbon credit framework, including verification systems and a national carbon registry, reportedly.The National Carbon Market Policy (DPKK), approved on April 1, will serve as the basis for Malaysia's participation in both voluntary and compliance carbon trading markets. He added that Malaysia remains committed to emissions reduction targets for 2035 and its net-zero goal by 2050, while continuing to push the green transition, the news outlet said.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)

$^KLSE
Asia

Japan Equities Advance on Stronger Outlook, Export Growth

Japanese equities closed higher on Wednesday, with the Nikkei 225 gaining after J.P. Morgan raised its year-end target for the benchmark to 70,000 from 61,000, citing momentum in AI and a weaker yen.On Wednesday, the Nikkei 225 rose 0.4%, or 236.69 points, to close at 59,585.86.Analysts at J.P. Morgan said concerns about overheating in the Nikkei 225 outweigh improving long-term growth prospects for Japanese equities, even as crude prices stay elevated.The benchmark index climbed to a record on Wednesday, nearing the 60,000 mark, as it recovered from a broad global selloff linked to tensions in the Middle East.In economic news, Japan's trade surplus widened to 667 billion yen in March as exports grew faster than imports, with shipments to China and the U.S. offsetting a sharp slump in Middle East trade amid the Iran conflict, data from the Ministry of Finance Japan showed.The Bank of Japan said the financial system remains stable but flagged rising risks from geopolitical tensions, higher oil costs, and exposures to real estate, foreign funds and leveraged market activity.On the corporate front, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial (TYO:8306) fell over 1% after a report said it is considering offering higher deposit rates for a planned digital bank to compete on speed and cost.Tokyo Electric Power (TYO:9501) rose about 4% after securing 4.7 billion yen in fresh grants to support ongoing nuclear compensation payouts.Advantest Corporation (TYO:6857) gained around 3% after joining Applied Materials' EPIC platform and opening a Silicon Valley research center to advance chip development.

$^N225$TYO:6857$TYO:8306$TYO:9501