A recent article covering Sunday's oil tanker explosion in San Francisco highlighted the troubles of using online mapping software to plan trips. What happens when a route suddenly ceases to exist because of road damage or, worse, a collapsed bridge?
Consumers have yet to see the day when road conditions are updated instantaneously using Yahoo!
Navteq has created one of the most extensive digital map databases and related software platforms, which it licenses and sells to online map providers and automotive firms such as Toyota
Garmin
Navteq's first-quarter earnings release earlier this week illustrated its cash-generating abilities, as free cash flow exceeded reported net income by a wide margin. I'd estimate Navteq is trading at close to 29 times this trailing free cash for 2006 -- close to what the stock trades for on a forward earnings basis.
That means shares have some aggressive growth assumptions baked into them. I found Navteq's stock a better deal last fall, when it fell below $30. But if Navteq proves instrumental in bringing real-time traffic updates to drivers and web surfers, investors could see a wide-open road to further gains ahead. A free 30-day trial to Stock Advisor will let you read up on the firm's exposure to the space.
For related Foolishness:
- Warren Buffett's Priceless Investment Advice
- Foolish Forecast: Key to Navteq's Earnings Map
- Navteq Travels Upward: Fool by Numbers
- 70 Times Better Than the Next Microsoft
To learn more about why Time Warner, Yahoo, Navteq and Garmin are all Stock Advisor picks, and see the newsletter's other market-beating recommendations, take a free 30-day trial.
Fool contributor Ryan Fuhrmann is long shares of Navteq but has no financial interest in any other company mentioned. Feel free to email him with feedback or to discuss any companies mentioned further. The Fool has an ironclad disclosure policy.