Parker-Hannifin Shows How to Compound. Wall Street Is Pleased. -- Barrons.com

Dow Jones11-13

Al Root

Aerospace and industrial parts supplier Parker-Hannifin is becoming an investor favorite largely by doing what it said it would do.

Parker announced the acquisition of Filtration Group for about $9.3 billion on Tuesday, expanding the company's presence in life sciences; heating, ventilation, and air conditioning; and industrial markets.

Parker paid 13.4 times estimated 2025 earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (Ebitda), including expected synergies of $220 million. That price looks reasonable: Industrial stocks in the S&P 500 trade for about 18 times estimated 2026 Ebitda.

Parker stock trades for about 22 times estimated calendar year 2025 Ebitda and about 20 times estimated calendar year 2026 Ebitda, according to FactSet.

"A perfect fit for Parker-Hannifin playbook," wrote BofA Securities analyst Andrew Obin in a Wednesday report. That playbook includes bolt-on M&A, funded partly out of cash flow, in businesses where Parker can improve operations.

He rates shares Buy and has a $950 price target for the stock. Obin didn't change his price target or rating after the deal. Overall, the average Wall Street price target moved up about $10 per share, to almost $910, according to FactSet.

Shares were trading down 0.9% at $850.57 in Wednesday trading.

Barron's wrote positively about Parker in August 2024, when shares were at about $570, calling Parker a "compounder" operating in a good industry. Compounders are growth-oriented companies that can generate double-digit earnings growth for years, typically through strategic bolt-on acquisitions that augment existing businesses.

Barron's reiterated the positive call in October 2025 when shares were at about $740. This week's acquisition doesn't change much for us. The aerospace outlook looks strong, and the company is executing on its M&A strategy.

Another aerospace parts supplier, Transdigm, gave its initial outlook for fiscal year 2026 on Wednesday, and it was positive news for the industry. The company said commercial original equipment sales should rise "in the high single-digit to mid-teens percentage range," commercial aftermarket sales should rise "in the high single-digit percentage range," and defense sales should grow in "the mid single-digit to high single-digit percentage range." That rolls up to double-digit growth for the industry in 2026.

Coming into Wednesday trading, Parker stock was up about 2% for the week and 35% this year. Shares trade for about 26 times estimated 2026 earnings, up from about 24 times a year ago. The higher valuation multiple is a sign investors like what's been happening at the company.

There is still no substitute for good business execution.

Write to Al Root at allen.root@dowjones.com

This content was created by Barron's, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. Barron's is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.

 

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November 12, 2025 13:21 ET (18:21 GMT)

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