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Will Eagle Rock Energy Partners Earn or Burn?

Margins matter. The more Eagle Rock Energy Partners (Nasdaq: EROC  ) keeps of each buck it earns in revenue, the more money it has to invest in growth, fund new strategic plans, or (gasp!) distribute to shareholders. Healthy margins often separate pretenders from the best stocks in the market. That's why we check up on margins at least once a quarter in this series. I'm looking for the absolute numbers, so I can compare them to current and potential competitors, and any trend that may tell me how strong Eagle Rock Energy Partners's competitive position could be.

Here's the current margin snapshot for Eagle Rock Energy Partners over the trailing 12 months: Gross margin is 27.1%, while operating margin is 7.4% and net margin is 4.7%.

Unfortunately, a look at the most recent numbers doesn't tell us much about where Eagle Rock Energy Partners has been, or where it's going. A company with rising gross and operating margins often fuels its growth by increasing demand for its products. If it sells more units while keeping costs in check, its profitability increases. Conversely, a company with gross margins that inch downward over time is often losing out to competition, and possibly engaging in a race to the bottom on prices. If it can't make up for this problem by cutting costs -- and most companies can't -- then both the business and its shares face a decidedly bleak outlook.

Of course, over the short term, the kind of economic shocks we recently experienced can drastically affect a company's profitability. That's why I like to look at five fiscal years' worth of margins, along with the results for the trailing 12 months, the last fiscal year, and last fiscal quarter (LFQ). You can't always reach a hard conclusion about your company's health, but you can better understand what to expect, and what to watch.

Here's the margin picture for Eagle Rock Energy Partners over the past few years.

anImage

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Dollar amounts in millions. FY = fiscal year. TTM = trailing 12 months.

Because of seasonality in some businesses, the numbers for the last period on the right -- the TTM figures -- aren't always comparable to the FY results preceding them. To compare quarterly margins to their prior-year levels, consult this chart.

anImage

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Dollar amounts in millions. FQ = fiscal quarter.

Here's how the stats break down:

  • Over the past five years, gross margin peaked at 25.7% and averaged 22.0%. Operating margin peaked at 12.2% and averaged -4.1%. Net margin peaked at 6.9% and averaged -8.3%.
  • TTM gross margin is 27.1%, 510 basis points better than the five-year average. TTM operating margin is 7.4%, 1,150 basis points better than the five-year average. TTM net margin is 4.7%, 1,300 basis points better than the five-year average.

With recent TTM operating margins exceeding historical averages, Eagle Rock Energy Partners looks like it is doing fine.

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Seth Jayson had no position in any company mentioned here at the time of publication. You can view his stock holdings here. He is co-advisor of Motley Fool Hidden Gems, which provides new small-cap ideas every month, backed by a real-money portfolio. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.


Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On February 14, 2012, at 10:13 AM, zorro6204 wrote:

    I follow this Seth guy (if there is such a person) around like a horse in a parade, sweeping up his droppings. Here's another completely worthless article about EROC (again), talking about . . . margins??? For an MLP combining an upstream component with midstream? Never mind that they disposed of an entire business segment over the period presented, which would make any comparative analysis worthless.

    I won't bother to point out how silly this is, it seems pointless, even to a novice.

  • Report this Comment On February 15, 2012, at 6:46 AM, 22PercentSolutn wrote:

    Zorro I think MF measures success by counting the number of comments an article collects. Since every time Seth talks about EROC like its a widget manufacturer, he gets us to reply that he is wrong, he is actually scoring points with management, I think these Eagle Rock stories will continue.

    Unlike Seth, I find asset value to be more relevant for an oil and gas producer than net margin, so I picked up a double on the warrants over the past year.

    Eagle Rock warrants dipped a few months back and provided another great entry point, right in the middle of another series of fool articles comparing EROC to a lemonade stand. To write about a company that is a MLP and. Not mention that fact is malpractice.

  • Report this Comment On February 15, 2012, at 9:23 AM, zorro6204 wrote:

    Heck, I think "Seth" is management, or at least an avatar in their computer, he never responds. It's doubly pointless to reply to these asinine things, anyone reading MF for investment advice deserves everything they get. But I can't stand to see nonsense posted as fact, drives me crazy.

  • Report this Comment On February 24, 2012, at 10:36 AM, 451245 wrote:

    By my metrics, at EROC's current $10.99 share price, it is a screaming buy.

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5/25/2012 4:00 PM
EROC $8.94 Down -0.09 -1.00%
Eagle Rock Energy… CAPS Rating: *****

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