3. Builders FirstSource, Inc. (NYSE:BLDR)
Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 59
Builders FirstSource, Inc. (NYSE:BLDR), an American manufacturer and supplier of building materials, is positioned to benefit from the housing market as supply chain constraints raise the prices of building components and construction companies grapple to increase market inventory.
Builders FirstSource, Inc. (NYSE:BLDR)’s above consensus earnings and revenue for the fourth quarter of 2021 are indicative of the company’s growing potential. Q4 revenue of $4.63 billion was up 23.5% year-over-year, driven by the merger with Building Materials Holding Corporation, double-digit organic growth, and commodity inflation.
On January 6, DA Davidson analyst Kurt Yinger raised the price target on Builders FirstSource, Inc. (NYSE:BLDR) to $100 from $93 and kept a Buy rating on the shares. The analyst cited the company’s completed acquisition of National Lumber, which adds to its “already leading national scale”.
Among the hedge funds tracked by Insider Monkey, 59 funds were bullish on Builders FirstSource, Inc. (NYSE:BLDR), up from 53 funds in the quarter prior. Coliseum Capital is the leading shareholder of the company, with a position worth roughly $403 million.
Here is what Merion Road Capital Management has to say about Builders FirstSource, Inc. (NYSE:BLDR) in its Q3 2021 investor letter:
“I added to our position in Builders FirstSource (“BLDR”) during the quarter. BLDR is the largest national supplier of structural building products and value-added components to the residential construction market. They have been active in consolidating the industry, most notably with the merger of BMC earlier this year. Like other distributors, BLDR benefits from scale advantages that afford them a robust product offering, enhanced purchasing power, and fixed cost leverage. They will continue to acquire smaller competitors and have announced 5 new deals so far this year.
I view the strategic benefit of these acquisitions in three different buckets. There are the core tuck-in acquisitions of facilities and customer lists that increase scale and geographic reach. An example would be the company’s May acquisition of John’s Lumber, a lumber and specialty product distributor serving the Detroit MSA, at 0.5x revenue. There are product acquisitions that leverage their platform to increase distribution and improve the product offering. For instance, last month BLDR announced the acquisition of California TrusFrame, a designer and manufacturer of prefabricated components like trusses and wall panels, at 1.3x revenue. And lastly BLDR has begun investing in software and services. In June they spent $450mm on the purchase of WTS Paradigm, a software company that addresses the complexity around building configuration, estimating, and manufacturing, at 9.0x revenue. By utilizing software in the planning process, WTS Paradigm cuts down on material and labor waste, ensures an optimal fit of product and design, and eases the contractor’s workload. BLDR has followed this up with a much smaller software acquisition in September.
BLDR is in the very early innings of their software investment, so it is difficult to pinpoint exactly how it will impact the company in the coming years. Management believes that there is a lot of low hanging fruit, pointing to a McKinsey study ranking the construction industry as second to last on overall digitization. If anyone has had any work done to their house, I am sure they can anecdotally attest to this. BLDR plans to leverage WTS Paradigm to increase internal productivity (i.e. improved estimating leading to fewer visits to the job site), cross-sell the software to existing clients, and drive greater adoption of value-added products. So thinking a few years out I think the goal would be to have higher margins on their commodity business, a greater mix of revenue coming from value added products, a stronger relationship with their customer, and an enhanced competitive advantage…” (Click here to see the full text)