Eastman Chemical Company: A Specialty Chemical Play Looking To Profit From New Business Lines


person using MacBook Pro on tableImage Source: UnsplashEastman Chemical Co. (EMN) is a global advanced materials and specialty additives company that produces a broad range of products found in various everyday items. Eastman Chemical has 36 manufacturing facilities and equity interests in three manufacturing joint ventures in 12 countries that supply products to customers worldwide, notes Kelley Wright, editor of IQ Trends.The company’s name is derived from its origins as part of Eastman Kodak. It was spun-out from Kodak back in 1994. Kodak had a need for chemicals for developing photographs when chemicals were scarce during WWI.In the hundred-plus years since, the chemical division has expanded way beyond its initial niche and is now a major supplier of specialty chemicals and materials, with a market cap approaching $12 billion and over $9 billion in sales in 2023.That was not a banner year for growth, as revenue declined from the $10-billion-plus of the two previous years. But the company was profitable due to gross margin improvement, a decline in R&D expenses, and the sale of its Texas City operations that closed last December.Free cash flow at close to $950 million should be sufficient to cover the $376 million dividend, $150 million in share repurchases, retire some debt, and increase cash on hand to $55 million. Eastman Chemical is a mature business, and as such, needs to generate new revenues for continued growth.One path is to invest into greater recycling capacity for plastics that have historically been difficult to recycle. Eastman Chemical Company has built a molecular recycling capacity in Tennessee that recently began generating revenue, and intends to build two more of these plants, one in France, and another in Texas, where the company has an existing plant.The Texas plant is attempting to secure up to $375 million through the Department of Energy from Inflation Reduction Act infrastructure funds. The goal is to recycle plastics from automobiles that are just as good as newly sourced plastics using Eastman Chemical’s carbon renewal technology (CRT).It can recycle almost any plastic into materials used in the production of new plastic resins. These resins can be molded into new automotive parts that meet a number of requirements established by Ford, GM, and others.The ROIC, FCFY, and PVR are 5%, 4%, and 2.9 respectively. The Economic Book Value is $33.72 per share.My recommended action would be to consider buying shares of Eastman Chemical Company.

About the Author
Kelley Wright entered the financial services industry in 1984 as a stock broker, first with a private investment boutique in La Jolla, and later with Dean Witter Reynolds. In 1990, he left the retail side of the industry for private portfolio management. In 2002, Mr. Wright succeeded Geraldine Weiss as the managing editor of the Investment Quality Trends newsletter, as well as the chief investment officer and portfolio manager for IQ Trends Private Client.His commentaries have been published in Barron’sForbesBusinessWeek, Dow Jones MarketWatch, The Economist, and many other business and financial periodicals. Mr. Wright is an active speaker at trade shows and investment conferences, and is a frequent guest and contributor to radio and CNBC. He is the author of Dividends Still Don’t Lie, which was published in February, 2010, by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.More By This Author:Williams Companies: A Thriving Natural Gas Transportation Play With A Solid YieldTesla: Jumping On Deliveries News Now, And Maybe AI Moves LaterQ2 2024 Scorecard: S&P, Nasdaq Strong; Dow, Russell Not So Much

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