Fastenal Company

FAST
NASDAQFree primer · Steps 1–3 of 21Updated May 13, 2026Coverage as of 2026-Q2
TTM ROIC
39%FY2025
Moat
Wide
Latest Q Revenue
$2.1BQ1 FY2026
Top Holder
Vanguard Group15.5%
Institutional
37.5%
Bull Case
FAST's 8%-penetrated FMI/Onsite embedded model and 37-41% ROIC are temporarily discounted by a demand-side pause and macro noise, not structural impairment.
Bear Case
Structurally slowing FMI signings, ongoing gross margin compression, and a demanding valuation multiple leave FAST vulnerable to significant de-rating.

Business Model


ticker: FAST step: 01 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research

Fastenal Company (FAST) — Business Overview

Business Description

Fastenal is the second-largest industrial distributor in the United States and one of the most capital-efficient industrials in the S&P 500. Founded in 1967 as a fastener distributor, the company has evolved into a full-service industrial supply platform — distributing fasteners, safety products, tools, cutting tools, janitorial supplies, and hundreds of other industrial categories to manufacturing plants, construction sites, and commercial facilities. What distinguishes Fastenal from competitors is its "embedded" go-to-market model: Fastenal personnel and vending/bin systems are physically located inside customer facilities (the "Onsite" and "FMI" programs), creating deep switching costs and a recurring inventory management relationship rather than a transactional purchasing one.

Revenue Model

Fastenal generates revenue by selling industrial supplies directly to customers, with increasingly automated and digital-first delivery mechanisms. Three key revenue channels: (1) Onsite locations (~40% of revenue): dedicated mini-warehouses staffed by Fastenal employees located inside a customer's facility — a captive supply chain service; (2) FMI (Fastenal Managed Inventory) — vending machines (FASTVend) and bin replenishment systems (FASTBin) located at customer sites, representing 44.7% of total sales in 2025; (3) Branch-based sales (~20%): traditional retail storefront and e-commerce. Digital footprint (e-commerce + FMI + EDI) reached 61% of total 2025 sales. Revenue is highly recurring and contract-driven with large national accounts.

Products & Services

  • Fasteners: Bolts, nuts, screws, anchor bolts — the original core product (~30–35% of revenue)
  • Safety Supplies: PPE, gloves, eyewear, hearing protection, lockout/tagout — one of the fastest-growing categories
  • Tools & Cutting Tools: Power tools, hand tools, drill bits, abrasives
  • Janitorial & Facility: Cleaning supplies, paper products, facility maintenance items
  • Other MRO (Maintenance, Repair, Operations): Electrical components, fluid management, pneumatics
  • FMI Technology: FASTVend (vending machines), FASTBin (bin stocking), EDI, e-commerce ordering — 136,600+ installed devices

Customer Base & Go-to-Market

Fastenal serves manufacturing plants (~50% of revenue), construction sites (~20%), and other commercial customers (~30%). Contract customers (national multi-site, government) represent the majority of revenue and grow faster than non-contract. Fastenal serves a broad range of industrial sectors: automotive, aerospace, food processing, energy, and construction. No customer concentration risk; revenues are highly diversified. The company has ~3,628 total locations across the U.S. and internationally (Canada, Mexico, Europe, Asia). 24,600 employees, with 15,400+ in selling roles.

Competitive Position

Fastenal holds the #2 position in U.S. industrial distribution behind W.W. Grainger, with a more manufacturing-focused customer mix. The Onsite and FMI embedded model creates switching costs that are higher than traditional distributors — once Fastenal's vending machines and bin systems are integrated into a manufacturer's supply chain, the cost and disruption of switching is material. Fastenal's gross margins (~45%) are significantly higher than Grainger's (~39%) due to product mix (higher-value fasteners and safety) and the value-added FMI service. Competitors include W.W. Grainger, MSC Industrial, Applied Industrial, and Amazon Business; none have replicated the Onsite density at scale.

Key Facts

  • Founded: 1967
  • Headquarters: Winona, Minnesota
  • Employees: ~24,600
  • Exchange: NASDAQ
  • Sector / Industry: Industrials / Industrial Machinery & Supplies
  • Market Cap: ~$50–55B (premium valuation, ~40x earnings, reflecting compounding quality)

Financial Snapshot


ticker: FAST step: 04 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research

Fastenal Company (FAST) — Financial Snapshot

Income Statement Summary

Metric FY2022 FY2023 FY2024 YoY
Revenue $6.98B $7.35B $7.55B +2.7%
Gross Margin ~45.3% ~45.5% ~44.8% -70bps
Operating Margin ~20% ~19.5% ~18.9% -60bps
Net Income ~$1.07B ~$1.15B ~$1.15B flat
EPS (diluted) ~$1.87 ~$2.02 ~$2.01 flat

FY2025: Revenue $8.20B (+8.7%), Net income $1.26B (+9.4%), EPS ~$2.21. Q1 2026 showed 12.4% sales growth with some margin pressure from tariffs.

Cash Flow & Balance Sheet (FY2025)

Metric Value
Operating Cash Flow ~$1.5B
Free Cash Flow ~$1.3B
FCF Margin ~16%
Cash & Equivalents ~$256M
Total Debt ~$200M
Net Debt Net cash positive (~$56M)

Fastenal has a remarkably clean balance sheet for an industrial company — effectively debt-free. Capital is primarily returned via dividends ($0.43/quarter = $1.72/year annualized) and modest buybacks.

Key Ratios (approximate, FY2025)

  • P/E: ~38–42x (significant premium to industrial peers) | FCF Yield: ~2.5%
  • EV/EBITDA: ~28–30x | Dividend Yield: ~2.0–2.5%
  • Revenue Growth (FY2025): +8.7% | Net Margin: ~15.3%
  • ROIC: ~30%+ (best-in-class for industrial distribution)

Growth Profile

Fastenal's revenue growth is closely tied to U.S. manufacturing PMI — the company expands faster than GDP in industrial expansion cycles and sees modest declines in manufacturing recessions. The long-term structural growth driver is the secular shift from branch-based purchasing to Onsite/FMI embedded programs: each new Onsite location adds recurring, growing revenue with minimal incremental cost. FY2024 was a flat year (+2.7%) as manufacturing softened; FY2025 accelerated to +8.7% on Onsite wins, safety category growth, and manufacturing recovery. Q1 2026 showed 12.4% growth, suggesting continued momentum.

Forward Estimates

  • FY2026: Revenue expected to grow 8–12% if manufacturing remains stable; gross margin under mild pressure from tariffs (fastener imports from China/Mexico); adj. EPS ~$2.40–$2.60
  • Onsite expansion: Targeting continued net new Onsite signings; each new active Onsite represents a permanent recurring revenue base
  • Dividend: $1.72/share annualized ($0.43/quarter); consistent annual increases; Fastenal has raised dividend every year for 25+ years

Recent Catalysts


ticker: FAST step: 12 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research

Fastenal Company (FAST) — Investment Catalysts & Risks

Bull Case Drivers

  1. Onsite/FMI Flywheel Creates Compounding Recurring Revenue — Fastenal's Onsite program (dedicated mini-warehouses inside customer facilities) now generates ~40% of total revenue, and each new Onsite location represents a long-term, sticky revenue base that grows as the customer facility grows. The 136,600+ FMI devices (vending machines, bin systems) embedded in manufacturing floors create daily, automated replenishment revenue with near-zero incremental selling cost. As the installed base compounds — each new signing adds to a permanent book of recurring business — Fastenal's revenue growth becomes increasingly structurally embedded rather than dependent on sales effort. The digital footprint reaching 61% of sales in 2025 confirms the transition from transactional distributor to industrial supply chain infrastructure.

  2. Manufacturing Reshoring as a Multi-Year Tailwind — The U.S. manufacturing renaissance (semiconductor fabs, EV battery plants, defense manufacturing expansion, CHIPS Act-funded construction) creates a decade-long demand tailwind for industrial MRO and fastener supplies. Every new factory in the U.S. is a potential new Onsite signing for Fastenal. The company's geographic density across all 50 states and deep penetration in key manufacturing corridors (Midwest, Southeast) positions it to capture this reshoring opportunity better than digital-only competitors. Q1 2026's 12.4% sales growth is partly attributable to early reshoring project activity.

  3. Quality Compounder with Fortress Balance Sheet at a High but Defensible Valuation — Fastenal has delivered 30%+ ROIC consistently for over a decade, has a net cash balance sheet (debt-free effectively), and has grown dividends for 25+ consecutive years. In a world where high-quality compounders with consistent growth are scarce, Fastenal commands a premium multiple (38–42x earnings). The premium is arguably defensible: the Onsite/FMI model has minimal capital requirements (vending machines are funded by customer contracts), revenue is highly recurring, and competitive moats are deepening through technology (EDI, digital ordering, AI-assisted inventory management). If EPS compounds at 10–12% annually as expected, the stock should deliver solid long-term returns even without multiple expansion.

Bear Case Risks

  1. Manufacturing Cyclicality Can Create Significant Revenue Drawdowns — Fastenal's revenue growth correlates tightly with the ISM Manufacturing PMI. When PMI falls below 50 (contraction), Fastenal typically sees low- to mid-single-digit revenue declines as industrial customers cut production and defer MRO spending. With tariffs potentially slowing U.S. manufacturing activity, trade war escalation, or a broader economic recession, Fastenal could see FY2026 or FY2027 revenue decline. At 40x earnings, the stock is priced for continued growth — any deceleration scenario causes disproportionate multiple compression. The Q3 2025 earnings miss (shares fell sharply after soft manufacturing data) demonstrates the market's sensitivity to any slowdown signal.

  2. Gross Margin Compression from Tariffs and Product Mix — Fastenal imports significant quantities of steel fasteners and other MRO products from China and, to a lesser extent, Mexico — both now facing elevated tariff regimes. Gross margins have already compressed from ~45.5% (FY2023) to ~44.8% (FY2024) and face further pressure. While Fastenal typically passes tariff costs to customers, there is a lag, and some customers push back on price increases during contract renewals. The safety category (faster-growing) has lower margins than the fastener category — so the positive product mix shift creates a structural margin headwind even absent tariffs. Sustained gross margin compression toward 43–44% would reduce earnings below current consensus.

  3. Premium Valuation Leaves No Margin for Error — At 38–42x trailing earnings and ~28x EV/EBITDA, Fastenal is one of the most expensively valued industrials in the S&P 500 — priced at a premium that rivals technology companies. This multiple is justified only if Fastenal sustains 8–12% revenue growth and stable margins. In a scenario where manufacturing softens, tariff costs persist, and EPS growth decelerates to 3–5%, the stock could de-rate to 25–30x (still premium vs. peers), implying 25–35% downside from current prices. The stock is a high-quality business, but a high-quality business at a demanding price is still a risky investment.

Upcoming Events

  • Q2 2026 Earnings (July 2026): Revenue growth rate and gross margin trajectory post-tariff implementation
  • ISM Manufacturing PMI (monthly): Leading indicator for Fastenal's revenue growth rate — key macro signal to watch
  • Onsite net new signing data (quarterly): Structural growth driver; deceleration would be concerning
  • FMI device installations: 136,600+ devices — trajectory of new signings signals medium-term embedded revenue growth
  • CEO transition: Any leadership change news (management stability is important for execution continuity)

Analyst Sentiment

Mixed-to-bullish: consensus is Hold/Buy with price targets ranging $65–$85. Bulls see the Onsite/FMI compounding model as a durable competitive advantage worth the premium; bears cite the valuation (41.8x vs. 24x peer average) as unsustainably high given manufacturing cyclicality and tariff headwinds. Wolfe Research has flagged tariff import risks specifically for Fastenal's steel fastener procurement. The stock is a consensus long-term quality holding but faces near-term headwinds from tariff cost absorption.

Research Date

Generated: 2026-05-12

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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