Jordan Lipson, Fund Manager, Cromwell Phoenix Global Opportunities Fund
More than 100 years ago, Oliver Hammond was on the way to supporting a nine-person family in a small house behind train tracks in Guelph, Ontario, Canada. Seeking to improve the family’s life, Oliver set up a pedal-powered lathe in a backyard shed. Oliver and his two sons worked in the business until Oliver’s early death, at which point his wife, Lillian, continued the business with her sons and daughters. Foot power soon gave way to electricity, and the company, then known as O.S. Hammond and Son began producing radio sets, battery chargers and related devices.
Snapshot
Background
Founded over 100 years ago in Guelph, Ontario, Hammond Manufacturing (HMM) started as a family-run business making radio sets and battery chargers. Today, it focuses on electrical enclosures, racks, and cabinets. In 2001, the company split into two:
HMM (enclosures) with Robert Hammond as Chair and CEO and controlling shareholder of HMM
Hammond Power Solutions (HPS) (transformers) with William Hammond as Chair and controlling shareholder of HPS
Both are listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange and serve similar markets, but their valuations differ significantly.
Valuation gap: HMM vs. HPS
HPS: Market cap over $1.5 billion1, trades at 17x earnings, with strong investor relations and analyst coverage.
HMM: Market cap just over $100M, trades at 6x earnings, with minimal investor outreach and limited public float (40% owned by CEO Robert Hammond).
Despite HMM’s solid growth (10% revenue and 25% EBIT CAGR over 7 years), it remains undervalued.
Strengths of HMM
Conservative, long-term focus: CEO Robert Hammond emphasizes security and stakeholder value.
Customer-first approach: High inventory levels and custom solutions ensure fast delivery and strong relationships.
Property ownership: Owns over 500,000 sq ft of facilities, held at depreciated cost—adding hidden value.
Clean financials: Transparent reporting and disciplined capital allocation.
Valuation potential
Comparable company: Nvent (owner of Hoffman, HMM’s main competitor) trades at 18x EBITDA.
Recent deal: Nvent bought Trachte (similar business) for 12x EBITDA.
If HMM were valued similarly, its share price could be 4x higher.
Outlook
HMM trades at a deep discount to both earnings and book value.
While a takeover is unlikely (due to Robert Hammond’s conservative approach), the business is well-positioned for long-term value creation.
Investors may need patience, but the current price offers a compelling opportunity.
1 All currency in this commentary refers to Canadian Dollars unless otherwise noted.
In the 1930s, Hammond created its first electrical racks and cabinets, the products that make up the core of Hammond Manufacturing’s business today. With the exploding demand for electrification in the 1950’s and 1960’s, Hammond became a meaningful supplier of electrical transformers, alongside its enclosures, racks and cabinets. In 2001, the business was split, with the transformer division spun into a new company, Hammond Power Solutions (HPS), and the enclosures business remaining with Hammond Manufacturing (HMM). Robert Hammond is Chair and CEO and controlling shareholder of HMM, while William Hammond is Chair and controlling shareholder of HPS. Both businesses are listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange, serve similar end markets and have similar growth drivers, yet their valuations could not be more different.
A tale of two Hammonds
HPS has unequivocally delivered great results in recent times, with growth driven by demand from data centres as well as other industrial applications. HPS also has a highly professional investor relations function, with detailed quarterly results presentations, slick ESG reporting and analyst coverage by major Canadian investment banks. HPS has been rewarded with a fair valuation. It has a market cap above $1.5 billion1 and trades on a price to earnings ratio above 17x. While HMM’s business hasn’t quite kept pace with HPS’s eye watering growth, over the past seven years it has grown revenues at approximately 10%
per annum and earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) at a rate of approximately 25% per annum. For all this good work, HMM has been “rewarded” with a price to earnings ratio of approximately 6x. HMM’s market capitalisation is just above $100 million, and shares are almost 40% owned by Robert Hammond leaving limited free float, partly explaining the cheap valuation. Furthermore, HMM’s investor relations function is almost non-existent, with a website out of the early 2000s and major updates from the Chairman limited to concise yearly letters in a mostly black and white annual report. As an example,
the entirety of the most recent letter can be seen here.
The lack of shiny presentations is not of concern. The financial statements are remarkably clean and understandable, and capital allocation priorities are clear, reasonable and focused on long term stakeholder outcomes. This is preferable to well marketed presentations, with highly adjusted earnings figures, which do not resemble the earnings power of the business. Despite this, it may in part explain some of HMM’s cheap valuation.
A safe and secure business
Despite the fast pace of growth, Robert Hammond values running a secure, conservative business. He ends each yearly letter stating, “we continue to build long term security and success for all our associates”. Still retaining family business values, there is a focus on promoting within and allowing “associates” to build a career at HMM. As Robert Hammond describes, “Grandma Lillian” taught the importance of customer service excellence and making your word your bond. This can be clearly seen in the strategy of HMM. It maintains significantly higher inventory levels than competitors so customers can receive their mission critical products in quick time. This held the company in relatively good stead during the COVID-affected period when supply chains came under pressure and demand meaningfully accelerated. The customer focus can be seen in the hands-on customisation options provided to customers and deep relationships with distributors, with sales staff even going on some distributor’s podcasts to spruik their wares.
Beyond this, HMM owns most of its manufacturing and corporate property footprint. This property is held at depreciated cost on its balance sheet. These properties have been acquired over a long period of time, including its main facility and corporate head office in Edinburgh Rd, Guelph, which was built in 1953. More recently, a 97,000 square foot facility was built when it became clear the existing production facilities were a constraining factor to the business. The property portfolio totals more than 500,000 square feet. HMM trades at a discount to its unadjusted book value, however applying a (very) conservative Despite the fast pace of growth, Robert Hammond values running a secure, conservative business. He ends each yearly letter stating, “we continue to build long term security and success for all our associates”. Still retaining family business values, there is a focus on promoting within and allowing “associates” to build a career at HMM. As Robert Hammond describes, “Grandma Lillian” taught the importance of customer service excellence and making your word your bond. This can be clearly seen in the strategy of HMM. It maintains significantly higher inventory levels than competitors so customers can receive their mission critical products in quick time. This held the company in relatively good stead during the COVID-affected period when supply chains came under pressure and demand meaningfully accelerated. The customer focus can be seen in the hands-on customisation options provided to customers and deep relationships with distributors, with sales staff even going on some distributor’s podcasts to spruik their wares.
Beyond this, HMM owns most of its manufacturing and corporate property footprint. This property is held at depreciated cost on its balance sheet. These properties have been acquired over a long period of time, including its main facility and corporate head office in Edinburgh Rd, Guelph, which was built in 1953. More recently, a 97,000 square foot facility was built when it became clear the existing production facilities were a constraining factor to the business. The property portfolio totals more than 500,000 square feet. HMM trades at a discount to its unadjusted book value, however applying a (very) conservative valuation to its property portfolio, HMM trades at a more than 40% discount to its book value, despite a strong return on assets and quality reinvestment opportunities. This exercise is somewhat theoretical as it is unlikely HMM will sell its properties, but ownership does allow for the security the business craves and increases the quality of its earnings.
A comparison
The largest competitor to HMM’s electrical enclosure business is Hoffman, which is wholly owned by US-listed business Nvent. The enitre company has a market capitalisation of more than USD$12 billion and owns related businesses such as those that produce cable management and power management products. Nvent recently acquire Trachte, a business that manufactures control buildings, for USD$695 million, or a price of 12x its forecast earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA). The company was at pains to equate the quality of this business to its enclosures business, with the CEO stating, “these control buildings are essentially larger enclosures.” If HMM were to be valued at Trachte’s acquisition multiple its share price would be four times higher (without adjusting for HMM’s property ownership). Nvent itself is valued at an enterprise value to EBITDA ratio of approximately 18 times. Valuing HMM at this multiple produces silly outcomes for HMM’s potential equity returns. Nvent’s enclosure business does have higher earnings margins and return on assets than HMM, but much of this is attributable to the fact this segment does not include apportioned centralised costs. In addition, Nvent runs with a leaner inventory profile and does not own its property.
Nvent has refined its portfolio acquiring new businesses and selling those it that no longer fit into its “connect and protect” businesses. In Nvent’s most recent earnings call, its CEO stated, “And on the acquisition M&A pipeline question, I would like to say that where we play in this Connect and Protect space, it’s about a $100 billion opportunity. And remember, at $3-plus billion, we’re one of the larger players. So it’s very fragmented. And I think there’s a lot of opportunities.” HMM’s business would fit perfectly for Nvent’s desires, as there would no doubt be an abundance of synergies to extract. It is highly likely that this would be anathema to Robert Hammond, who prefers to run a more secure, but less efficient business focussed on all stakeholders, including customers and employees. However, it is likely that Nvent would pay many multiples of today’s share price to acquire HMM.
These valuation exercises are important to do, but an instant realisation event is highly unlikely. HMM does however trade at a price to earnings ratio of approximately 6x and a meaningful discount to any assessment of true book value. These valuation levels imply the business is antagonistic to shareholders or that earnings aren’t sustainable. On the first count, Robert Hammond is a major shareholder and receives below market remuneration. He has also previously discussed that HMM shares are owned by hundreds of employees. On the second, while HMM’s end markets are very much cyclical, the business has produced operating profits each year since 2002 and is the beneficiary of some industries facing an elongated period of secular growth. One such example is the growth in data centre development.
All in all, it is hard to say when and if HMM’s shares will reflect fair value. Its management are long-term oriented and clearly care about all stakeholders. Similarly, precisely assessing HMM’s fair value is challenging and will likely be different to an acquirer, relative to a continuation of the status quo. What can be said is the current share price reflects a very meaningful discount to fair value. We will wait patiently for this value to be reflected while Robert Hammond and the HMM team work to make the business even more valuable in the future.
1 All currency in this commentary refers to Canadian Dollars unless otherwise noted
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