You may have noticed that this earnings season has brought
about a series of trends among the nation's larger industrial
companies. While much of 2008 saw the companies held afloat
by international sales amid slowing U.S. markets, the most
recent period has been characterized by several
phenomena:
revenue numbers
Significant cost reductions
Sequential earnings improvements that
exceeded expectations
Lingering concerns about conditions in 2010
Minnesota-based
3M (NYSE: MMM), which makes everything from
Post-It Notes to medical and filtration devices, has joined
such companies as
DuPont (NYSE: DD) and
Dow Chemical (NYSE: DOW) in displaying those
trends. For the quarter, 3M earned $957 million, $1.35 per
share after special items, versus $991 million, or $1.41 per
share, a year earlier. Analysts had been expecting earnings
of about $1.17 per share.
Looking at the company's six individual segments, Health
Care, along with Display and Graphics, led the parade with
increases in sales. The Safety, Security, and Protection
Service unit suffered a sales decline of 2%, while its
operating income rose by 9.8%, helped on by 27% operating
margins and H1N1 respirator demand. That same
demand also kept
Kimberly-Clark (NYSE: KMB) busy.
As CFO Pat Campbell noted during the company's call, "The
respiratory factories have been running 24 hours a day, seven
days a week since May of this year to keep up with demand,
but we have been unable to significantly reduce our backorder
volume levels."
At the same time, the other three operating segments --
Industrial and Transportation, Consumer and Graphics, and
Electro and Communications -- watched their sales slide
year-on-year, but all expanded versus the prior quarter.
It appears that those companies that have picked up steam
in the quarter are those that adopted an approach early on in
the downturn and stuck with it. As CEO George Buckley said on
the call, he could "almost give you my second-quarter remarks
here again, because Q3 was really all about continued
execution of the plan, rather than any radical new pathway or
strategy."
So now we'll wait for
companies like
Manitowoc (NYSE: MTW) and
ITT (NYSE: ITT) to report later this week to
see if the same economic trends hold up for the relatively
smaller industrial-goods companies. In the meantime, however,
it seems that 3M has turned the corner nicely, and merits
Foolish attention.Â
I'd suggest you set out for
3M's CAPS
page. It may only have three Ms, but
Motley Fool CAPSplayers
have awarded it five stars.
This article was originally published as
3M Means Make Mucho Moneyon
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