Arcosa, Inc.

ACA
NYSEFree primer · Steps 1–3 of 21Coverage as of 2026-Q2

Business Model


source: coverage-next-full ticker: ACA company: Arcosa, Inc. step: "01" title: Business Model & Overview created: 2026-06-03

Step 01 — Business Model & Overview

Key Findings

Net positive for thesis. Arcosa has successfully transformed from a conglomerate-with-barge-drag into a focused infrastructure materials + structures business over seven years. The Stavola acquisition deepens the moat in Construction Products, and the barge divestiture removes the segment that most constrained the valuation multiple. The business model is asset-intensive with local barriers — the right foundation for sustained pricing power.

Implications for Thesis and Valuation

  • Post-barge, Construction Products should represent ~55-60% of EBITDA — crossing the threshold where aggregates comps become truly relevant
  • The value chain is deliberately local: quarries, asphalt plants, and concrete operations cannot be replicated by national competitors without permit-constrained land acquisitions
  • Engineered Structures (utility poles, traffic structures, wind towers) adds a long-cycle infrastructure backlog that smooths cyclicality in the portfolio
  • The key investor debate is whether ACA closes the 30-40% valuation gap to VMC/MLM — that requires demonstrating Construction Products at premium margins sustained over 3+ years

Objective

Map Arcosa's business model, revenue architecture, value-chain positioning, and competitive logic across its two remaining segments. Identify the primary economic engine and assess portfolio coherence.

Narrative Analysis

Company Origin and Identity

Arcosa emerged from Trinity Industries as a spinoff in November 2018 [S1]. Trinity's rationale was classic portfolio surgery: a diversified conglomerate with a rail car business (kept as Trinity) and an infrastructure products business (spun as Arcosa) was worth less than its parts. At spin, Arcosa had three roughly equal segments and a "growth-by-acquisition" mandate in the fragmented construction materials space.

The seven years since have validated the thesis. Construction Products — aggregates, recycled aggregates, concrete, asphalt — has grown from the smallest to the largest segment by EBITDA as a result of $2.7B in acquisitions since spin-off [S2]. The most recent and significant: Stavola ($1.2B, October 2024), which planted Arcosa's flag in the NY-NJ metropolitan area with highly scarcity-protected reserves.

Segment Architecture (Post-Barge)

Construction Products (~50-55% of FY2025 revenue, ~60% of EBITDA post-divestiture)

The core economic engine. Arcosa quarries, crushes, and processes natural aggregates (crushed stone, sand, gravel) and recycled aggregates (a growing specialty where Arcosa claims market leadership). It also produces ready-mix concrete and hot-mix asphalt at integrated facilities.

The aggregates business is characterized by:

  • Local monopoly economics: A quarry 10 miles from a construction site defeats one 50 miles away purely on transport cost. Permits are impossible to replicate in urban/suburban markets. [S3]
  • Pricing power above inflation: Aggregates pricing has structurally outpaced CPI since 2015, driven by supply constraints and IIJA-fueled demand. VMC and MLM demonstrate 8-12% annual price increases in recent years. [S4]
  • Stavola's strategic importance: The NY-NJ metro is the highest-price, lowest-supply aggregates market in the US. Stavola's five quarries and 12 asphalt plants give Arcosa rare access to a market effectively closed to new entrants. Stavola operates at ~35% EBITDA margins vs. the broader Construction Products segment average of ~25%. [S2]

Engineered Structures (~35-40% of FY2025 revenue, ~30-35% of EBITDA)

Arcosa designs and manufactures steel structures for:

  • Utility structures: Transmission poles and monopoles (electric grid hardening / grid build-out)
  • Traffic structures: Highway sign structures, bridge overpasses, traffic signal poles (state DOT contracts)
  • Wind towers: Onshore wind turbine towers (the segment's most policy-sensitive line)

This segment is order-backlog driven, with $1.16B in combined utility + wind backlog as of Q1 2026 [S5]. Long-cycle contracts (12-24 months) create revenue visibility but also expose Arcosa to commodity steel cost pass-through dynamics. Management uses contract structures that allow steel surcharges, providing partial pass-through.

The wind tower risk: The One Big Beautiful Budget Act (OBBBA, enacted July 2025) terminates the Alternative Minimum Premium (AMP) clean energy credit for wind towers sold after 2027 [S6]. This creates a pull-forward dynamic — wind developers will accelerate builds through 2027 — followed by a potential demand cliff. Arcosa's wind tower business was approximately $300-350M of Engineered Structures revenue in FY2025. The bear case assumes a 70-80% revenue decline in wind towers by FY2028.

Value Chain Positioning
CONSTRUCTION PRODUCTS VALUE CHAIN:
Raw land/quarry acquisition → Permitting → Extraction → Crushing/Processing →
Transport → Concrete/Asphalt Production → Job site delivery

ARCOSA POSITION: Extraction through delivery (vertically integrated in key markets)
KEY MOAT: Permitting + reserve scarcity (esp. Stavola NY-NJ locations)

ENGINEERED STRUCTURES VALUE CHAIN:
Steel procurement → Fabrication → Testing → On-site installation (third-party)

ARCOSA POSITION: Steel procurement through fabrication
KEY MOAT: Scale + government relationships in utility/DOT contracts
Capital Allocation Model

Since spin-off, Arcosa has operated as a serial acquirer in construction materials [S7]:

  • ~$2.7B in construction products acquisitions since 2018
  • Prioritizes fragmented markets with local moats where Arcosa can apply operational improvements
  • Dividend is modest ($0.05/quarter); returns favor reinvestment
  • Post-barge, $450M in proceeds give management flexibility for either debt paydown or further acquisitions
  • FY2026 guidance implies significant deleveraging: from ~2.3x net debt/EBITDA to ~1.5-1.7x by year-end
Management Philosophy

CEO Antonio Carrillo (in role since spin-off) built his track record on operational improvement at acquired companies [S8]. CFO Gail Peck joined in 2020. The management team has guided conservatively and raised guidance — a consistent pattern over the last 4 years — suggesting credibility in setting and meeting targets. No evidence of aggressive accounting or unusual earnings management in the XBRL data.

Evidence and Sources

  • $2.7B in cumulative construction products acquisitions per investor presentation [S2]
  • Stavola: 5 quarries, 12 asphalt plants, 2 recycled aggregate facilities [S2]
  • Backlog: $1.16B utility + wind combined as of Q1 2026 per consensus notes [S5]
  • OBBBA wind credit termination: Post-2027 per regulatory filings / news [S6]
  • CEO Antonio Carrillo tenure: since November 2018 spin [S8]

Assumption Register Updates

  • Added: Construction Products as % of EBITDA post-barge (~60%) — Estimate, Medium sensitivity
  • Added: Stavola EBITDA margin (~35%) — Estimate (stated by management), Medium sensitivity

Tables and Calculations

Segment Economics Summary (FY2025, estimated split)
Segment Revenue ($M) Rev % Est. EBITDA ($M) EBITDA Margin
Construction Products ~1,520 ~53% ~345 ~22.7%
Engineered Structures ~1,010 ~35% ~163 ~16.1%
Transportation Products (barge, divested) ~353 ~12% ~75 ~21.2%
Total ~2,883 100% ~583 ~20.2%

Note: Segment EBITDA split estimated from 10-K operating profit + D&A allocation. FY2025 10-K filed Feb 2026. Barge divested April 1, 2026.

Historical Revenue by Segment ($M, where available)
Segment FY2021 FY2022 FY2023 FY2024 FY2025
Construction Products ~850 ~1,000 ~1,050 ~1,300 ~1,520
Engineered Structures ~800 ~950 ~1,050 ~960 ~1,010
Transportation Products ~315 ~385 ~360 ~310 ~353
Total ~1,965 ~2,335 ~2,460 ~2,570 ~2,883
Post-Barge Pro Forma (FY2026 guidance)
Metric Value
Revenue ~$2,620M (consensus)
Adj. EBITDA $545–585M (company guidance)
EBITDA Margin ~21.4% midpoint
Net Debt (est. post-barge proceeds) ~$990M
Net Debt / EBITDA ~1.7x

Open Questions and Data Gaps

  1. Exact segment EBITDA splits are estimates — 10-K reports operating profit by segment, not EBITDA
  2. Wind tower revenue as % of Engineered Structures not disclosed precisely
  3. Recycled aggregates revenue vs. natural aggregates split not broken out
  4. Stavola organic growth rate post-acquisition not separately quantifiable

Source Index

Source Tag Document or URL Section Date Notes
[S1] ACA_financials/sec_filings/10K_FY2025_summary.md Business overview 2026-06-03 Spin-off history, segment descriptions
[S2] ACA_financials/presentations/investor_presentation_2024.md Acquisitions + Stavola 2026-06-03 $2.7B cumulative, Stavola details
[S3] ACA_financials/industry/competitive_landscape.md Aggregates moat 2026-06-03 Permit barriers, transport economics
[S4] ACA_financials/industry/market_overview.md Pricing trends 2026-06-03 Aggregates pricing above CPI
[S5] ACA_financials/other/consensus.md Backlog data 2026-06-03 $1.16B backlog per analyst notes
[S6] ACA_financials/sec_filings/10K_FY2025_summary.md Risk factors 2026-06-03 OBBBA / AMP credit wind risk
[S7] ACA_financials/other/stockanalysis_summary.md Cash flow — acquisitions 2026-06-03 M&A spend history
[S8] ACA_financials/proxy/governance_and_compensation.md Management bios 2026-06-03 CEO/CFO tenure

Financial Snapshot


source: coverage-next-full ticker: ACA company: Arcosa, Inc. step: "04" title: Financial Quality & Adversarial Sweep created: 2026-06-03

Step 04 — Financial Quality & Adversarial Sweep

Key Findings

Net positive for thesis — clean financials, no material adversarial flags. Arcosa's accounting is straightforward GAAP with transparent disclosure. The primary adjustment — amortization of acquired intangibles (~$100M+/yr post-Stavola) — is legitimate and well-disclosed. No short reports, investigations, restatements, or material lawsuits flagged in the adversarial sweep. The key financial quality risk is the gap between adj. EBITDA (management's preferred metric) and GAAP operating income, which investors should understand.

Implications for Thesis and Valuation

  • Adj. EBITDA is addback-heavy in FY2024-2025 due to Stavola integration costs and intangible amortization; after the integration completes (~FY2026 normalized), the gap narrows
  • The FCF conversion ratio (~57% of adj. EBITDA in FY2025) is lower than peers partly because of elevated capex for Stavola site integration and organic growth projects — a normalized rate of 65-70% is achievable
  • No GAAP red flags: consecutive years of positive operating cash flow since spin-off, no meaningful SARP/non-cash revenue, no channel stuffing patterns in receivables
  • Adversarial sweep found no short reports, SEC investigations, or material class action litigation

Objective

Evaluate accounting quality, key adjustments between reported and adjusted metrics, and any adversarial signals (short reports, lawsuits, regulatory investigations, fraud allegations). Apply an Adversarial Research Sweep.

Narrative Analysis

Accounting Quality Assessment

Revenue Recognition: Arcosa follows standard GAAP revenue recognition. Construction Products revenue is recognized at point of delivery (aggregate tons, ready-mix concrete delivery). Engineered Structures revenue is recognized on a percentage-of-completion basis for long-term contracts, which is appropriate and consistent with industry practice [S1]. No unusual deferral or acceleration patterns detected in the quarterly revenue data.

Key Adjustments (adj. EBITDA vs. GAAP):

The ~$112M gap between EBITDA and adj. EBITDA in FY2025 consists of:

  1. Intangible amortization: ~$70-80M from the Stavola acquisition (goodwill is not amortized; customer relationships, permits, and trade names are). This is a legitimate non-cash cost but represents real economic value consumed.
  2. Integration and transaction costs: ~$20-25M (Stavola closing costs, consulting, restructuring). These are genuinely one-time.
  3. Other non-recurring items: ~$10-15M (asset write-downs, environmental reserves).

The amortization of acquired intangibles will run off over 5-15 years depending on the asset class. Investors using adj. EBITDA should understand that ~$70-80M/year of "added back" cost is a recurring feature of an acquisition-intensive model, not a true one-time item [S2].

Working Capital: Receivables days outstanding (DSO) and inventory turns are consistent across periods. No unusual buildups in receivables or inventory that would suggest revenue pull-forward or channel stuffing. DSO of ~45-50 days is typical for construction materials. [S3]

Cash Flow Quality: Operating cash flow has been positive every year since the 2018 spin-off. FCF has been positive in 5 of 7 years (mildly negative in FY2021-2022 during the heavy acquisition + capex phase). The FCF/adj. EBITDA conversion ratio:

  • FY2023: ~65%
  • FY2024: ~74% ($331M FCF / $447M EBITDA)
  • FY2025: ~57% ($331M FCF / $583M EBITDA — elevated capex year with Stavola integration capex)

Balance Sheet Quality: Goodwill is ~$1.2B as of FY2025, representing ~27% of total assets [S3]. This is high but not alarming for a serial acquirer. Management has not written down goodwill in any of the post-spin years, suggesting acquisitions have at minimum maintained their carrying value. The Stavola acquisition added substantial goodwill and identifiable intangibles.

Leverage: Pre-barge-proceeds, net debt was ~$1.43B (FY2025 year-end) [S4]. Net debt/adj. EBITDA = 2.3x — manageable but above the historical 1.0-1.5x range. The barge proceeds ($450M) should bring this to ~1.5x by mid-2026, returning to the historical comfort zone.

Adversarial Research Sweep

This analysis is conducted from the filings-and-consensus path (no transcript access). The sweep covered:

Short Seller Reports: No material short reports on ACA/Arcosa identified via Tavily search and industry research. Short interest is low (~2.8-2.9% of float), suggesting limited institutional short conviction [S5].

SEC Investigations: No SEC enforcement actions, AAER (Accounting and Auditing Enforcement Release), or Wells Notices disclosed in any filing reviewed. Clean EDGAR record [S1].

Restatements: No financial restatements since the 2018 spin-off [S1].

Material Litigation: Standard construction industry litigation (slip-and-fall, contract disputes, environmental). No class action securities suits. No material asbestos or environmental claims threatening the balance sheet [S1].

Environmental / Regulatory: Quarry operations carry ongoing air quality and water permits. No material permit revocations or enforcement actions identified. The FY2025 10-K includes standard risk factor language about potential environmental liabilities, but no specific material contingencies disclosed [S1].

Acquisition Integration Risk: The Stavola integration is the most material operational risk. Management stated integration is on track and Stavola is achieving target margins. No impairment indicators in FY2025. This needs monitoring through FY2026 results.

Wind Tower OBBBA Risk (disclosed): This is a transparently disclosed risk factor, not a hidden liability. The company includes it prominently in risk factors and has quantified exposure through backlog visibility. This is a known-known for the market [S1].

Quality Rating: B+ (Good)
  • Revenue recognition: Clean (A)
  • Adjustments: Legitimate but adj. EBITDA flatters GAAP by $100M+ (B)
  • Cash flow: Strong, above-peer conversion post-integration (A-)
  • Balance sheet: Leveraged but manageable; goodwill elevated (B)
  • Adversarial signals: None identified (A)

Evidence and Sources

  • Adj. EBITDA vs. GAAP bridge: investor presentation [S2]
  • No restatements, SEC investigations: EDGAR filing review [S1]
  • Short interest ~2.84-2.90%: consensus.md [S5]
  • Balance sheet goodwill ~$1.2B: stockanalysis_summary.md [S3]
  • Net debt ~$1.43B: presentations/investor_presentation_2024.md [S4]

Assumption Register Updates

  • Added: Intangible amortization ~$70-80M/yr (recurring, post-Stavola) — Fact/Estimate, Medium sensitivity
  • Added: FCF conversion ~65-70% normalized (vs. 57% in FY2025 due to elevated capex) — Estimate, High sensitivity

Tables and Calculations

GAAP vs. Adj. EBITDA Bridge (FY2025, estimated)
Item Amount ($M) Category
GAAP Operating Income ~$337 Fact
+ Depreciation & Amortization ~$130 Non-cash
= GAAP EBITDA ~$467 Fact
+ Amortization of intangibles (Stavola) ~$75 Recurring
+ Integration/transaction costs ~$25 One-time
+ Other non-recurring ~$16 One-time
= Adj. EBITDA $583 Reported
Cash Flow Quality (FY2021-FY2025)
Year Adj. EBITDA Operating CF Capex FCF FCF/EBITDA
FY2021 ~$300M ~$185M ~$175M ~$10M ~3%
FY2022 ~$327M ~$215M ~$230M -$15M N/M
FY2023 ~$380M ~$320M ~$175M ~$145M ~38%
FY2024 $447M ~$415M ~$175M ~$331M ~74%
FY2025 $583M ~$450M ~$185M ~$331M ~57%

Note: FY2021-2023 FCF estimates derived from XBRL data. FY2024 FCF confirmed per investor presentation.

Balance Sheet Health Check (FY2025)
Metric Value Benchmark Assessment
Net Debt / Adj. EBITDA 2.3x <2.5x target ⚠ Above target, improving
Goodwill / Total Assets ~27% <30% comfortable ✓ Acceptable
Current Ratio ~1.4x >1.0x ✓ Adequate
Interest Coverage (EBIT/Int) ~5.2x >3.0x ✓ Comfortable
Adversarial Sweep Summary
Risk Category Finding Severity
Short reports None identified None
SEC investigation None disclosed None
Restatements None since 2018 spin None
Class action litigation None material None
Environmental Routine permits only Low
Wind policy (OBBBA) Disclosed, visible High (but known)
Acquisition integration On track per management Medium

Open Questions and Data Gaps

  1. Exact Stavola intangible amortization schedule not broken out separately in XBRL
  2. Contract backlog margins not disclosed (is the backlog at current margins or legacy lower?)
  3. FCF in FY2026 will benefit from Stavola integration capex winding down — need Q1/Q2 2026 data

Source Index

Source Tag Document or URL Section Date Notes
[S1] ACA_financials/sec_filings/10K_FY2025_summary.md MD&A, Risk Factors 2026-06-03 Accounting policies, litigation
[S2] ACA_financials/presentations/investor_presentation_2024.md EBITDA reconciliation 2026-06-03 Adj. EBITDA bridge
[S3] ACA_financials/other/stockanalysis_summary.md Balance sheet, ratios 2026-06-03 Goodwill, DSO, leverage ratios
[S4] ACA_financials/presentations/investor_presentation_2024.md Debt slide 2026-06-03 Net debt $1.43B at FY2025
[S5] ACA_financials/other/consensus.md Short interest 2026-06-03 ~2.84-2.90% of float

Recent Catalysts


source: coverage-next-full ticker: ACA company: Arcosa, Inc. step: "12" title: Bull/Bear Analysis & Catalysts created: 2026-06-03

Step 12 — Bull/Bear Analysis & Catalysts

Note: This step uses the analyst-debate framework but, since transcripts are not loaded, the bull/bear case is inferred from consensus notes, press releases, investor presentations, filings, and recent news. Transcript analysis was not performed (coverage-next-full path).

Key Findings

The analyst debate on ACA centers on three tensions: (1) how much of the EBITDA growth is structural (aggregates moat) vs. cyclical (IIJA pull-forward) and M&A-driven (Stavola, not repeatable), (2) whether Arcosa can re-rate to premium aggregates multiples despite being smaller, more diversified, and more leveraged than VMC/MLM, and (3) how severe the post-2027 wind tower demand cliff will be. The bull case is a re-rating to 16-18x EV/EBITDA as Construction Products mix rises; the bear case is a stuck multiple with EBITDA erosion from wind policy.

Implications for Thesis and Valuation

  • The strongest bull argument is the irreplaceable Stavola reserve position — a permanent competitive advantage in one of the highest-price aggregates markets in the US
  • The strongest bear argument is the OBBBA wind cliff + leverage combination: if wind revenue declines sharply in FY2028 and a simultaneous construction slowdown hits, the combination could pressure EBITDA toward $450-480M and drive de-leveraging stress
  • Current consensus is uniformly bullish (3/3 analysts at Buy, $146 avg target) — the risk is that bearish scenarios are underweighted by the sell side
  • Near-term catalysts: Stavola synergy confirmation in Q2-Q3 2026, wind backlog disclosures, next acquisition announcement

Objective

Map the bull and bear investment cases from all available non-transcript sources. Produce the mandatory bull case (3 bullets) and bear case (3 bullets) that will feed the public /stocks page.

Narrative Analysis

The Bull Case — Thesis Construction

Argument 1: The Stavola Moat Is Irreplaceable and Undervalued

The NY-NJ metro aggregates market is structurally supply-constrained — no new quarries can be permitted in this market. Arcosa paid ~9x EBITDA for Stavola's five quarries and 12 asphalt plants in October 2024 [S1]. As Stavola achieves full synergies (ACA management targets above-average margins), this business should earn $130-150M in EBITDA annually, all protected by a 30-year+ reserve life with no competitive threat. VMC trades at 21-22x EBITDA. If Arcosa's Construction Products segment (which will represent ~60% of EBITDA post-barge) re-rates to even 17x (MLM's multiple), the implied value add is $15-25/share vs. current price.

Argument 2: IIJA is Multi-Year, Peaking Now

Federal infrastructure spending is in its peak execution phase. The obligation-to-outlay lag means the highest construction activity from the $568B IIJA program will hit in FY2026-2028 [S2]. This is directly additive to Arcosa's aggregate volumes, asphalt revenues (road paving is the single largest IIJA program), and utility structures demand. The aggregates pricing cycle, which has consistently run at 1.5-2x CPI, is not at risk from this demand surge — it makes it more durable. Arcosa is positioned in Texas, Southeast, and NY-NJ — all states with significant IIJA highway and bridge programs.

Argument 3: Barge Divestiture and Deleveraging Create Acquisition Capacity

The $450M barge divestiture (April 2026) does four things simultaneously: (1) simplifies the equity story to two clean segments, (2) removes $10-15M EBITDA of lower-quality cyclical revenue, (3) reduces net debt to ~$980M / ~1.75x EBITDA, and (4) creates dry powder for the next construction products acquisition. Management has been a disciplined 7-10x EBITDA acquirer in fragmented construction materials markets. A $300-600M acquisition in FY2026-2027 at similar multiples to prior deals is likely and would be accretive on day 1. Each $100M in acquired EBITDA at 9x acquisition cost could add $3-6/share of equity value [S3].

The Bear Case — Thesis Risks

Argument 1: Wind Tower Policy Cliff Creates a FY2028 Earnings Air Pocket

OBBBA terminates AMP credits for wind towers sold after December 31, 2027. Arcosa's wind tower backlog supports elevated revenue in FY2026-2027 (pull-forward demand), but creates an artificial baseline [S4]. If wind developers cut new orders post-2027 (as historical precedent from prior ITC/PTC expirations suggests), Arcosa's wind tower revenue could fall 60-80% in FY2028. At $300-350M in current wind revenue, this creates a $180-280M revenue hole (and $30-50M EBITDA hole) in FY2028 that Construction Products growth alone may not offset within a single year. Investors who value ACA on FY2026-2027 EBITDA without discounting the FY2028 cliff are mispricing the risk.

Argument 2: Valuation Multiple Is Already Pricing the Re-Rating

ACA trades at ~13x EV/EBITDA on FY2026E. The bear case is that this is already a reasonable reflection of the re-rating: the stock has doubled from its 2023 trough, the sell side is uniformly bullish, and the stock is at 91% of its 52-week high [S5]. For ACA to deliver a 25-30% return from here, the multiple needs to expand to 16-17x AND EBITDA needs to grow. If multiples stay flat (current 13x) and EBITDA grows 8% per year, the return is modest (~8% per year). The re-rating requires multiple expansion, which is not a foregone conclusion: Arcosa is smaller than VMC/MLM, more leveraged, and has an Engineered Structures segment with wind policy risk. The market may cap the re-rating.

Argument 3: Stavola Integration Risk and Leverage

The Stavola acquisition was $1.2B — the largest Arcosa has ever done, by a factor of 3x vs. prior transactions. Management has not executed an integration at this scale before [S1]. If there are operational surprises (quarry underperformance, asphalt margin shortfall, NY-NJ labor relations), the synergies could underwhelm. Additionally, with $1.4B in net debt at FY2025 year-end, any softness in FCF could push leverage back toward 2.5x, constraining capital allocation and potentially triggering covenant concerns. The bears argue that the execution risk on Stavola is not fully priced in when the stock is at 13x EBITDA.

Bull Case — 3 Bullets

  • Stavola's irreplaceable NY-NJ aggregates position (5 quarries, 12 asphalt plants, 35% EBITDA margin) creates a permanent competitive advantage in the US's most supply-constrained aggregates market, justifying re-rating toward MLM/SUM multiples (16-18x EV/EBITDA) as Construction Products reaches 60%+ of EBITDA.
  • IIJA-driven demand is at peak execution (2026-2028), with $568B in Federal infrastructure commitments funding highway, bridge, and utility projects that directly consume Arcosa's aggregates, asphalt, and utility structures — providing multi-year organic volume + pricing visibility.
  • Portfolio simplification and deleveraging (barge sale = $450M, leverage declining from 2.3x to ~1.7x by end-2026) clears the balance sheet for the next acquisition cycle, where management has a proven record of 10x EBITDA returns on $100-300M construction materials deals.

Bear Case — 3 Bullets

  • OBBBA wind tower policy cliff eliminates AMP clean energy credits post-2027, creating an estimated $40-50M EBITDA air pocket in FY2028 as wind developer backlog empties and new orders collapse, while the pull-forward in FY2026-2027 flatters near-term earnings and masks the structural reset.
  • Valuation re-rating is already partially priced with ACA at ~13x EV/EBITDA after a ~100% stock appreciation since the 2023 trough — further multiple expansion to VMC levels (21-22x) is unlikely given Arcosa's smaller scale, higher leverage, and mixed-segment profile vs. pure-play aggregates peers.
  • Stavola integration and first-large-deal execution risk: At $1.2B, Stavola is 3x the size of Arcosa's prior largest deal, and NY-NJ operations carry unique labor and community complexity — any margin shortfall vs. the stated 35% target weakens the thesis that supports the re-rating case.

Catalyst Calendar

Catalyst Timing Bullish Signal Bearish Signal
Q2 2026 earnings Aug 2026 CP margin expansion; Stavola synergies confirmed Wind backlog draw-down; margins flat
Next acquisition announcement FY2026-2027 High-quality CP bolt-on at 8-9x Over-priced; leveraged balance sheet
FY2027 wind tower guidance Q4 2026/Q1 2027 Backfill of wind capacity with utility orders Wind cliff confirmed; no offset
IIJA highway project awards Ongoing Volume/price acceleration Delayed spending; slower than expected
Credit rating change FY2026 Upgrade to investment grade reduces cost of capital Downgrade from leverage increase

Assumption Register Updates

  • Added: Wind revenue at risk FY2028 = $300-350M with $40-50M EBITDA exposure (Estimate, High sensitivity)
  • Added: Re-rating to 16-18x EV/EBITDA requires 3+ years sustained CP margin above 23% (Judgment, High sensitivity)

Open Questions and Data Gaps

  1. What is management's FY2027 plan for wind tower capacity? (transcript unavailable)
  2. What is the pipeline of utility structure work that can offset wind revenue?
  3. How much of Stavola's integration capex is remaining in FY2026?

Source Index

Source Tag Document or URL Section Date Notes
[S1] ACA_financials/presentations/investor_presentation_2024.md Acquisitions + Stavola 2026-06-03 Transaction details, integration
[S2] ACA_financials/industry/market_overview.md IIJA 2026-06-03 Peak execution timing
[S3] ACA_financials/industry/competitive_landscape.md Valuation section 2026-06-03 Re-rating thesis and multiples
[S4] ACA_financials/sec_filings/10K_FY2025_summary.md OBBBA risk factor 2026-06-03 Wind policy risk
[S5] ACA_financials/other/consensus.md Market data 2026-06-03 Price, 52-week range, analyst data

Full Research Available

This primer covers steps 1–3 of 21. The full deep dive includes moat analysis, DCF valuation, bull/bear scenarios, management quality, earnings transcript analysis, competitive positioning, returns on capital, institutional/insider activity, and an investment memo.

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Arcosa, Inc. (ACA) — Equity Research | Margin of Insight