Construction Partners Inc. (ROAD) posted fourth-quarter results Thursday that told two different stories depending on which line you looked at. The infrastructure company's earnings came in lighter than Wall Street wanted, while revenue managed to exceed expectations—a mixed bag that left analysts recalibrating their outlooks.
The numbers tell the tale: Construction Partners reported earnings of $1.02 per share, falling short of the $1.09 consensus estimate. On the revenue side, though, the company delivered $899.849 million, comfortably beating the $892.713 million analysts had penciled in. It's the kind of quarter that makes you wonder whether investors care more about the top line or the bottom line these days.
Management isn't backing down from its growth ambitions. Construction Partners reaffirmed its fiscal 2026 sales guidance, keeping the target range at $3.400 billion to $3.500 billion. That's not something you do if you're worried about business conditions deteriorating.
Company President and CEO Fred J. (Jule) Smith III struck an upbeat tone in the earnings release: "We delivered a strong fourth quarter that capped a year of significant growth and margin expansion, in line with the preliminary financial ranges we announced in October. Our disciplined execution across our Sunbelt operations, powered by more than 6,800 employees, continues to drive record results through safe, efficient project construction and strong market demand."
The market's reaction was fairly muted—Construction Partners shares dipped just 0.4% to $100.06 on Friday. But the analyst community made some notable adjustments following the earnings release.
What the Analysts Are Saying
Two prominent Wall Street firms moved their price targets lower, though both kept their bullish ratings intact. B of A Securities analyst Michael Feniger maintained his Buy rating on Construction Partners but trimmed his price target from $120 down to $115. Meanwhile, Baird analyst Andrew Wittmann kept his Outperform rating while lowering his target from $131 to $124.
The price target cuts suggest analysts are being a bit more cautious about valuation, even as they remain fundamentally positive on the company's prospects. When you beat on revenue but miss on earnings, it raises questions about margins and cost management—exactly the kind of thing that might justify a slightly lower multiple.