Morton Thiokol
Morton Thiokol was an American corporation involved in aerospace, chemicals, and salt production. It has become a legendary case study in the world of value investing due to the extreme market reaction following the 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger disaster. The company manufactured the solid rocket boosters (SRBs) whose failure led to the catastrophe. In the immediate aftermath, the company's stock plummeted as investors, driven by fear and outrage, anticipated its ruin. However, a deeper analysis revealed that the market had grossly overreacted. The panic created a classic value opportunity where the company’s stock was trading for less than the value of its non-aerospace businesses alone, offering a significant margin of safety. The Morton Thiokol saga is a powerful real-world lesson on how to find extraordinary value by remaining rational when others are panicking.
The Challenger Disaster and the Market's Verdict
A National Tragedy
On January 28, 1986, the Space Shuttle Challenger broke apart 73 seconds into its flight, killing all seven astronauts on board. The investigation, led by the Rogers Commission, quickly identified the cause: the failure of an O-ring seal in the right solid rocket booster, which was manufactured by Morton Thiokol. The commission's public hearings revealed that engineers had warned of potential O-ring failure in cold weather, but these warnings were overruled by management. The public condemnation was swift and severe. Morton Thiokol became synonymous with corporate negligence and national tragedy.
Mr. Market's Panic
Wall Street's reaction was brutal. Morton Thiokol's stock price collapsed by nearly 30% in the weeks following the disaster. The market's logic was simple: the company was facing unlimited liability, the potential loss of its most important government contract with NASA, and reputational ruin that would taint its other businesses. Investors sold shares indiscriminately, pricing the company for bankruptcy. This is a perfect illustration of Benjamin Graham's famous allegory of Mr. Market—a manic-depressive business partner who offers to sell you shares at wildly pessimistic prices on bad news days.
A Value Investor's Perspective
While the crowd panicked, astute value investors saw a potential opportunity born from crisis. The key was not to downplay the tragedy but to separate the emotional narrative from the underlying business fundamentals.
Finding Value in the Wreckage
The most crucial insight came from a sum-of-the-parts analysis. Morton Thiokol was not a one-trick pony; it was a conglomerate with two major divisions:
- Aerospace: This division built the SRBs for the shuttle and other missile systems. It was the source of all the negative headlines.
- Specialty Chemicals: This highly profitable and stable division included the iconic Morton Salt (“When it rains, it pours®”) and a variety of industrial chemicals and polymers. This business had nothing to do with the Challenger disaster.
The Ultimate Margin of Safety
Value investors at the time, like Michael Steinhardt, performed a simple but powerful calculation:
- 1. They calculated the company's total market capitalization after the stock price crash.
- 2. They estimated the value of the specialty chemicals division as if it were a standalone company. This business was stable, profitable, and easy to value.
- 3. The stunning conclusion was that the value of the chemical division alone was greater than the entire company's market capitalization.
In essence, by buying Morton Thiokol stock at its post-crash price, an investor was buying the world-class chemical and salt business for less than it was worth and getting the entire controversial aerospace division for free. The market was so focused on the shuttle disaster that it completely ignored the value of the company's other assets. This provided an enormous margin of safety, protecting the investment even if the aerospace division turned out to be worthless (which it didn't).
The Aftermath and Key Takeaways
A Stellar Recovery
The market's worst fears never came to pass.
- Morton Thiokol redesigned the faulty joint in the SRBs and, despite the scandal, remained a crucial contractor for NASA, which needed its unique expertise.
- The company's financial liability was significant but manageable and far less than the “unlimited” figure the market had feared.
- The chemical business continued to generate strong, predictable cash flows.
Within two years, the stock had fully recovered and went on to new highs, delivering a spectacular return for those who bought during the panic. The company later split, with the chemical business becoming Morton International and the aerospace/defense business becoming Thiokol Corporation (which later merged to form ATK Thiokol and is now part of Northrop Grumman Innovation Systems).
Lessons for the Modern Investor
The Morton Thiokol story offers timeless wisdom for value investors:
- Think like a business owner, not a speculator: Focus on the underlying value of the assets, not the squiggles of the stock chart or the sensationalism of news headlines.
- Seek temporary problems: The best bargains are found in great companies facing a temporary, solvable crisis that has scared away less disciplined investors.
- Embrace contrarianism: True value is often found where the news is worst and the fear is greatest. As Warren Buffett says, “Be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful.”
- Always demand a margin of safety: Buying a business for less than the value of its parts is one of the most effective ways to build a buffer against uncertainty and miscalculation.