Table of Contents

Hexcel (NYSE: HXL)

The 30-Second Summary

What is Hexcel? A Plain English Overview

Imagine you're building the most advanced Lego model in the world—a perfect replica of a Boeing 787 Dreamliner or a massive wind turbine blade. You wouldn't use the standard plastic bricks. You'd need something revolutionary: bricks that are incredibly strong, unbelievably light, and resistant to extreme temperatures and stress. In the world of advanced manufacturing, Hexcel makes those “magic bricks.” The company doesn't make airplanes or engines. It manufactures the underlying materials that make modern aerospace possible. These are called “advanced composites.” The most famous is carbon fiber, a material woven from microscopic strands of carbon that, when combined with special resins, creates a finished product with superhuman properties. Hexcel's business can be broken down into three main areas:

At its core, Hexcel is a high-tech manufacturing company whose success is tied to the global demand for things that need to be both incredibly strong and incredibly light.

“The best businesses are the ones that have a moat around them. And the wider the moat, the better.” - Warren Buffett 1)

The Value Investor's Thesis for Hexcel

For a value investor, a company like Hexcel presents a fascinating case study in weighing a high-quality business against significant, unavoidable risks. It's a classic example of a “great company” that is only a “great investment” at the right price. Here's how a value investor would break down the investment case:

How to Analyze Hexcel: Key Metrics and Drivers

Analyzing Hexcel is less about complex financial modeling and more about understanding the physical world of airplane manufacturing. You need to become a “supply chain detective.”

Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) to Watch

An investor should track these metrics to gauge the health and future prospects of Hexcel's business.

Metric What it is Why it Matters for Hexcel
Aircraft Backlogs The total number of firm aircraft orders that Boeing and Airbus have yet to deliver. This is the single most important leading indicator of Hexcel's future revenue. A large and stable backlog (e.g., 7-10 years of production) provides excellent long-term visibility.
Build Rates The number of aircraft (e.g., A320s or 737s) that Boeing and Airbus are producing per month. While the backlog is the future, build rates are the present. Changes in build rates directly and immediately impact Hexcel's quarterly sales.
Shipset Value The dollar value of Hexcel's materials on a single, specific aircraft. This is a crucial measure of Hexcel's importance. The shipset value on a new composite-rich plane like the A350 (over $5 million) is many times that of an older aluminum plane. Growing this value is key.
Operating Margin A company's operating income as a percentage of its revenue. Learn more. In a cyclical industry, stable or expanding margins during good times are a sign of pricing power and operational efficiency. How quickly they recover after a downturn is a key test of the business's quality.
Free Cash Flow (FCF) The cash a company generates after accounting for capital expenditures. Learn more. This is the ultimate measure of a business's financial health. A value investor wants to see Hexcel consistently generate strong FCF through the cycle, which it can use to reinvest, pay down debt, or return to shareholders.
Debt / EBITDA Ratio A measure of a company's leverage. Learn more. For a cyclical company, a low debt load is paramount. High debt can be fatal during a downturn. An investor should be wary if this ratio creeps up, especially at the peak of a cycle.

Building an Investment Case

A compelling investment case for Hexcel from a value investing perspective would look something like this:

  1. Step 1: Confirm the Moat. Analyze the company's position with Boeing and Airbus. Is its content on new, long-life aircraft programs secure? Yes. The moat is intact.
  2. Step 2: Assess the Cycle. Where are we in the aerospace cycle? Are build rates near a peak or in a trough? Are airlines profitable and ordering new planes, or are they in crisis mode? The goal is to buy in the trough.
  3. Step 3: Check the Financial Health. Is the balance sheet strong enough to survive a deep and prolonged downturn? Look for low debt levels and a history of prudent capital_allocation.
  4. Step 4: Calculate Intrinsic Value. Using a conservative estimate of future free cash flows (perhaps by averaging earnings over a full cycle), determine what the business is fundamentally worth. Learn more.
  5. Step 5: Demand a Margin of Safety. Because of the inherent cyclicality and unpredictability, an investor should demand to buy the stock at a significant discount (e.g., 40-50%) to their estimate of its intrinsic_value. This discount is your protection against being wrong or another unexpected crisis.

A Tale of Two Cycles: Hexcel Pre- and Post-Pandemic

There is no better real-world example of the Hexcel investment thesis than the COVID-19 pandemic.

The World in 2019: Peak Altitude

In late 2019, the aerospace industry was flying high.

The World in 2020: The Crash

Then, in March 2020, the world stopped.

A value investor looking at this situation would ask: “Has the long-term thesis changed?”

The price of the business had fallen dramatically, but the fundamental quality and long-term prospects of the business itself were largely unchanged. The pandemic provided a textbook, albeit terrifying, opportunity to buy a wonderful business at a fair, or even wonderful, price, fully embracing the principle of margin_of_safety. Those who did were handsomely rewarded as air travel, and Hexcel's stock, recovered.

The Bull Case vs. The Bear Case (Strengths & Risks)

No investment is without risk. A prudent investor must weigh the potential upside against the potential downside.

Strengths (The Bull Case)

Weaknesses & Common Pitfalls (The Bear Case)

1)
While not a direct quote about Hexcel, Buffett's emphasis on moats is the perfect lens through which to view this company.