Johnson Controls, Inc. (JCI) Is Going Nowhere. Here’s Why.

Sales at America’s automakers have been going great guns these past few quarters, and you’d think that would be great news for the companies that make parts for all these shiny new autos. In some cases, you’d be right to think that. But in at least one case — the case of Johnson Controls, Inc. (NYSE:JCI) stock — you’d be very, very wrong.

Shares of auto-parts makers such as Lear (NYSE:LEA) and Magna International (NYSE:MGA) have rocketed this past year, outperforming the S&P 500 with 46% and 56% returns, respectively. Yet Johnson Controls, Inc. (NYSE:JCI) stock has lagged the market average by more than five points. Why?

Three reasons.

Johnson Controls, Inc. (NYSE:JCI)Johnson Controls stock is worse than average
Turns out that when you stack up Johnson Controls, Inc. (NYSE:JCI) stock against its two smaller rivals, there’s precious little to recommend it. Johnson Controls’ P/E ratio of 27.8 is no bargain. It’s more than twice the cost of a share of Magna (which costs 10.5 times earnings), and nearly six times the cost of Lear, which sells for only 4.7 times earnings.

Worse, when you lay the three companies side-by-side, you can plainly see that Johnson Controls, Inc. (NYSE:JCI) generates far less real cash profit than its rivals do. Its free cash flow yield is the worst of the bunch:

JCI Free Cash Flow Yield Chart

JCI Free Cash Flow Yield data by YCharts

Johnson Controls grows too slow
Johnson Controls, Inc. (NYSE:JCI) stock is no great shakes when valued on more traditional “GAAP” earnings, either. Fact is, over the past five years Johnson Controls stock is the only one of the three that has seen earnings actually decline:

Johnson Controls stock is going nowhere
Of course, there’s still the old investing truism to consider — that investing isn’t about what a stock has done in the past, but what it might do in the future. Problem is, despite the shrinking earnings that are giving it a smaller earnings base to grow from in the future, Johnson Controls stock is still expected to be the slowest grower of the group:

So once again, we find Johnson Controls, Inc. (NYSE:JCI) stock occupying last place in a losing race.

Now admittedly, Johnson isn’t all bad. It does, for example, pay the biggest dividend of the three companies, at  2%. But Magna pays nearly as big a dividend, is growing faster, and costs less. Lear, while paying the smallest dividend of the group (1.1%), is growing fastest and therefore has the most potential to grow its dividend in the future. Plus, at 4.7 times earnings, it’s a heck of a lot cheaper than Johnson.

That’s why, on balance, I see little reason to prefer Johnson Controls stock over its rivals. In the coming years, I expect to see Johnson Controls stock go exactly nowhere.

The article Johnson Controls Stock Is Going Nowhere. Here’s Why. originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Rich Smith has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends and owns shares of Ford.

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