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 of $8.50 to $8.70 implies earnings growth of 5.5% to 7.9%—nearly four to five times faster than the expected industrial growth rate. How does a company achieve earnings growth that dramatically outpaces its markets? Operational improvement.
Bill Brown’s restructuring has delivered measurable results: improved on-time, in-full delivery rates, better asset utilization, reduced quality-related losses, and a relentless focus on innovation. These aren’t just buzzwords—they’re the mechanics of margin expansion in a tough environment.
The NPI Strategy: Quality-Driven Growth Taking Shape
New Product Introductions (NPIs) are the linchpin of 3M’s earnings growth story. The numbers tell a striking progression:
Why does this matter for quality? NPIs command higher pricing power and allow 3M to escape commodity-pricing traps that have historically pressured margins. Under the previous leadership, this was a vulnerability. Today, it’s becoming a competitive advantage.
The irony is that 3M’s most troubled segments—consumer discretionary, automotive aftermarket, auto builds, and roofing granules—are precisely the interest-rate-sensitive areas that could stabilize if the Fed eases further in 2026. Meanwhile, Safety & Industrial, the company’s largest and healthiest segment, already posted 3.8% organic sales growth in 2025. The risk-reward skews decidedly toward improvement.
Valuation Disconnect: Where Value Hides
Here’s where the opportunity becomes concrete. 3M’s forward price-to-free-cash-flow (FCF) multiple of 18 is attractive for a mature industrial company generating high single-digit earnings growth. More importantly, management’s guidance bakes in a conservative macro view—it assumes zero growth in U.S. industrial production for 2026.
If that assumption proves even modestly optimistic, there’s significant upside built into the current valuation. The stock is priced for a stalled economy, not an improving one. And given 3M’s demonstrated ability to grow earnings faster than its end markets through operational execution, the asymmetry favors buyers.
The Bottom Line: Quality Matters in a Tough Market
3M’s transformation under Bill Brown represents something investors don’t often see: a large-cap industrial company genuinely improving its operational quality while facing headwinds. The combination of margin expansion, accelerating new product innovation, attractive valuation, and modest macro assumptions creates a compelling entry point.
This isn’t a growth story. It’s a quality and execution story. And for investors looking for that combination in uncertain times, 3M looks undervalued right now.