
Air Products and Chemicals (APD) just marked a $70 million expansion of its Missouri Manufacturing and Logistics Center, its largest single site investment. The project is aimed at rising demand in biogas, hydrogen recovery, aerospace, and marine fuels.
See our latest analysis for Air Products and Chemicals.
APD's share price has eased recently, with a 1 month share price return of down 6.9% after a stronger run that left the year to date share price return at 12.9%. The 1 year total shareholder return is 5.2%, hinting that momentum has cooled despite earnings and expansion news.
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With earnings beating expectations, a fresh US$70 million expansion, and analysts setting higher price targets, APD now trades below those targets but also screens as expensive on some intrinsic measures. Is this a genuine opportunity, or is future growth already priced in?
Air Products and Chemicals trades on a P/E of 29.8x, which prices the stock above some value indicators even though the last close sits below analyst targets.
The P/E ratio compares the current share price with earnings per share, so a higher figure usually means investors are willing to pay more for each dollar of profit. For a large industrial gas producer with established operations across the Americas, Asia, Europe, the Middle East and India, that kind of multiple often reflects expectations of steady earnings and cash generation rather than early stage hyper growth.
Here, the P/E of 29.8x looks expensive relative to an estimated fair P/E of 25x. This suggests the market is assigning a richer price than that fair ratio level could support. Against the broader US chemicals industry, where the average P/E is 27.7x, APD also sits at a premium, even though it screens as cheaper than a peer group average of 34.2x. Taken together, those cross checks point to a stock that is priced more optimistically than both its industry and a regression based fair ratio, and where the current multiple could compress if sentiment cools.
Explore the SWS fair ratio for Air Products and Chemicals
Result: Price-to-Earnings of 29.8x (OVERVALUED)
However, the premium P/E and recent share price pullback mean that any earnings disappointment or slowdown in demand for key gases could quickly pressure sentiment.
Find out about the key risks to this Air Products and Chemicals narrative.
While the 29.8x P/E leaves APD looking expensive, our DCF model goes further and values the stock at about $215.16 per share versus the current $282.85. That implies the price sits well above modeled future cash flows, so how much growth is already baked in?
Look into how the SWS DCF model arrives at its fair value.
Simply Wall St performs a discounted cash flow (DCF) on every stock in the world every day (check out Air Products and Chemicals for example). We show the entire calculation in full. You can track the result in your watchlist or portfolio and be alerted when this changes, or use our stock screener to discover 46 high quality undervalued stocks. If you save a screener we even alert you when new companies match - so you never miss a potential opportunity.
With mixed signals on valuation and sentiment, do not wait for hindsight to tell you what to think. Weigh the key trade offs now with the 2 key rewards and 2 important warning signs
If APD is already on your radar, do not stop there. Use screeners to quickly spot other stocks that could fit your style before the crowd notices.
This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.
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