Stock of the Day

August 4, 2021

Iron Mountain (IRM)

$91.77
-$1.73 (-1.9%)
Market Cap: $27.46B

About Iron Mountain

Iron Mountain Incorporated (NYSE: IRM) is a global leader in information management services. Founded in 1951 and trusted by more than 240,000 customers worldwide, Iron Mountain serves to protect and elevate the power of our customers' work. Through a range of offerings including digital transformation, data centers, secure records storage, information management, asset lifecycle management, secure destruction and art storage and logistics, Iron Mountain helps businesses bring light to their dark data, enabling customers to unlock value and intelligence from their stored digital and physical assets at speed and with security, while helping them meet their environmental goals.

Iron Mountain Bull Case

Here are some ways that investors could benefit from investing in Iron Mountain Incorporated:

  • The recent increase in the quarterly dividend to $0.785 per share indicates a commitment to returning value to shareholders, which can attract income-focused investors.
  • Analysts have a consensus rating of "Moderate Buy" with an average price target of $129.17, suggesting potential upside from the current stock price of approximately $104.85.
  • Iron Mountain Incorporated has a strong institutional backing, with 80.13% of the stock owned by hedge funds and other institutional investors, indicating confidence in the company's future performance.
  • The company reported a revenue of $1.58 billion for the quarter, which, despite missing estimates slightly, shows strong operational performance in a competitive market.
  • Recent upgrades from analysts, including a "strong-buy" rating from BNP Paribas, reflect positive sentiment and potential for growth in the company's stock value.

Iron Mountain Bear Case

Investors should be bearish about investing in Iron Mountain Incorporated for these reasons:

  • The company reported earnings per share (EPS) of $0.50, significantly missing the consensus estimate of $1.20, which raises concerns about profitability and operational efficiency.
  • Iron Mountain has a very high dividend payout ratio of 794.47%, which may not be sustainable in the long term, potentially leading to future cuts in dividends if earnings do not improve.
  • The negative return on equity of 44,660.04% indicates that the company is not generating profit from its equity, which can be a red flag for investors regarding financial health.
  • Insider selling activity, with executives selling a total of 162,391 shares worth $16,805,912 in the last quarter, may signal a lack of confidence in the company's short-term prospects.
  • Despite a strong institutional presence, the company has faced recent downgrades, including a "sell" rating from StockNews.com, which could indicate a shift in market sentiment.

Can Iron Mountain Pivot To Compete With Data-Center REITs?

Written By Kate Stalter on 7/16/2021

Can Iron Mountain Pivot To Compete With Data-Center REITs?

As businesses increasingly rely on the cloud for document storage, companies like Iron Mountain (NYSE: IRM) are capitalizing on the shift away from paper.

A couple of years ago, when I was moving out of a house, I had a junk hauler remove some items I no longer needed, including a metal file cabinet. Fortunately, he was able to sell it to a scrap metal recycler. However, he told me a big chunk of his business consisted of people ditching unwanted file cabinets. Second-hand stores won’t even take them, as nobody wants to buy them anymore.

Those old cabinets are still found in office settings, but less frequently, and taking up less real estate every year. 

Enter Iron Mountain, a Boston-based company that provides records management, data protection and information destruction services. You may have seen their trucks, which pick up shredding jobs from business customers. They also pick up papers to store securely in temperature-controlled warehouses. That’s a good solution for papers such as medical or legal records that need to be kept for regulatory or other reasons, yet take up a lot of space in offices. 

However, as companies move away from paper, Iron Mountain has to pivot. One obvious direction is data storage. The company has already made a name for itself as a document and data security specialist, so the transition makes intuitive sense.

That involves a real-estate play, as the company begins to find space for data centers. 

At this time, Wall Street mainly views Iron Mountain as a document shredder and storage company. 

Companies viewed more as data-center specialists include Equinix (NASDAQ: EQIX), CoreSite Realty (NYSE: COR) and Digital Realty Trust (NYSE: DLR).

Those three companies are all structured as real estate investment trusts, meaning they have some advantages to investors in the form of pass-through income and pass-through tax deduction. 

Here’s how all those companies stack up when it comes to their three-year annualized revenue growth rates:

Iron Mountain: 2.55%

Equinix: 11.15%

CoreSite Realty: 7.99%

Digital Realty Trust: 2.55

As you see, a paper storage company can’t really keep pace with the revenue growth of companies whose specialty is data storage, even when structured as real-estate plays. 

Can Iron Mountain turn itself around and make paper storage a smaller piece of its business, and grow the data piece? 

It certainly has an advantage when it comes to brand awareness, with all those trucks driving around cities. 

Customer stickiness is also a benefit. In a recent interview with Wall Street Transcript, CEO William Meaney said 950 of “the world’s largest companies are our customers, and our customer churn is less than 2% a year.”

Iron Mountain shares are up 17.09% in the past three months, 53.62% year-to-date and 68.57% over the past 12 months. That three-month return remains strong despite the stock’s current pullback.

The stock is forming a flat base since retreating from its June 9 high of $47.34. So far, it’s corrected 11% from peak to trough. The base could also be construed as a cup, as it’s also taking that shape. As long as the correction remains under 15%, you can also characterize it as a flat base. At this time, the buy point is that prior high of $47.34.

On a technical basis, the stock is setting up nicely for a new run-up. However, would-be investors should be aware that Iron Mountain reports its second-quarter on August 5, with analysts expecting earnings of $0.64 per share on revenue of $1.09 billion. Those would represent gains on both the top-and-bottom lines. 

However, the company has a history of missing Wall Street views. That hasn’t hurt the stock price recently, however. 

Earnings grew in each of the past four years, with the three-year annualized net income growth rate being 26.30%. 

Shares closed Thursday at $44.04, up $0.30 or 0.69%. 

Analysts’ current price target for Iron Mountain is $33, which represents a 25% downside. That’s another reason for potential investors to sit tight until the next earnings report. 

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