Is CF Industries Undervalued? A Deep Dive Into the World’s Largest Ammonia Producer

2026-06-11

CF Industries Holdings is the world’s largest producer of ammonia and a leading manufacturer of nitrogen-based fertilisers, including urea and ammonium nitrate. Founded in 1946 and headquartered in Northbrook, Illinois, it operates nine nitrogen-manufacturing complexes across North America and the United Kingdom. Revenue is generated by selling ammonia, urea, UAN, and AN products principally to agricultural customers. CF benefits from structurally low North American natural gas costs relative to global peers. The company is also investing in clean and low-carbon ammonia as a future energy carrier. With ~2,800 employees, FY2025 revenues reached $7.1 billion and adjusted EBITDA $2.89 billion.

Intrinsic Value Calculations

Key Inputs Used

InputValueSource / Notes
TTM EPS (FY2025)$8.97 (diluted)Full-year 2025 reported
TTM EPS (Q1 2026 annualised)~$9.53Yahoo Finance TTM
FY2025 Free Cash Flow$1.79BCompany press release
Shares Outstanding (approx.)~154MPost buybacks, ~Q1 2026
FCF per Share (FY2025)~$11.62$1.79B / 154M
Long-term EPS growth rate used5% (conservative base)Commodity cycle-adjusted
Discount rate9%Investor’s required return
Terminal growth rate2.5%Nominal GDP long-run
Net Debt (approx.)~$1.66B$3.62B debt minus $1.98B cash
EV/EBITDA (current)~5.1xYahoo Finance
Sector median EV/EBITDA7–9xFertiliser peer group

Intrinsic Value Results

MethodResultMargin of Safety at $106.50
DCF (Base: 5% growth, 9% discount, 2.5% terminal)$128+20% upside
DCF (Bull: 8% growth, 9% discount)$162+52% upside
DCF (Bear: 2% growth, 10% discount)$92-14% downside
MEV — EV/EBITDA (7x on $2.89B Adj. EBITDA)$118+11% upside
MEV — EV/EBITDA (9x — cycle peak)$153+44% upside
MEV — EV/EBITDA (5x — trough)$83-22% downside
Blended Base Intrinsic Value~$123+15% discount to intrinsic value

Valuation Ratios

MetricValueImplication
P/E (TTM, ~$9.53 EPS)11.2xBelow 10-yr median of ~13.7x — cheap
PEG Ratio (P/E ÷ 5yr LT growth 4%)2.8xAbove 1 — growth priced in at low growth rate
PEGY (PEG adjusted for 2.5% dividend yield)1.7xBelow 2 — reasonably attractive when yield included
FCF Yield~10.9%High; supports buybacks and dividends
EV/EBITDA~5.1xDeeply discounted vs. peers
P/B~3.3xReasonable given asset-heavy model

PEGY = P/E ÷ (EPS Growth Rate + Dividend Yield %). With P/E 11.2, growth 4%, div yield 2.5%: PEGY = 11.2 ÷ 6.5 = 1.72. Below 2 is favourable; below 1 is exceptional. This indicates moderate value with yield support.

Investment Q&A Analysis

QuestionAnswer & Assessment
Is the business model simple and sustainable?Yes. CF produces nitrogen fertilisers from natural gas. Farmers globally need nitrogen to grow food; this demand is non-discretionary and structurally growing. The model is simple: buy cheap North American gas, convert it to ammonia and derivatives, sell at global market prices. Durability is high; risk is commodity-price cyclicality.
Intrinsic Values, PE, PEG, PEGYDCF Base: $128 | MEV Base: $118 | Blended IV: ~$123. P/E: 11.2x | PEG: 2.8x | PEGY: 1.72x. Stock trades at a ~15% discount to blended IV.
Durable competitive advantage (moat)?YES — Moderate-to-Strong. Cost moat via North American gas advantage (gas at ~$3/MMBtu vs. $8–15 in Europe/Asia). Scale moat as world’s largest ammonia producer. High capital barriers to entry. Donaldsonville facility is the largest single-site ammonia complex on Earth.
Competitors and positioningKey rivals: Nutrien (NTR), Mosaic (MOS), Yara International (Norway), OCI (Netherlands). CF is the low-cost North American producer, outperforms peers on margins and returns in up-cycles. Nutrien is larger but diversified into retail; CF is purer nitrogen play.
Management competence and alignmentSTRONG. Repurchased $1.34B in shares in 2025, $1.51B in 2024. Dividend raised 67% since 2020. CEO Chris Bohn replaced Tony Will in 2026 with continuity of strategy. Capital allocation discipline is excellent: buybacks predominantly below intrinsic value, no dilutive acquisitions.
Is the stock undervalued vs. intrinsic value?At $106.50 vs. blended IV of ~$123, the stock trades at approximately a 15% discount. Against a peak MEV scenario ($153), potential upside is 44%. Undervalued on most measures. BUY territory.
Capital efficiency (ROE, ROIC)?ROE TTM: ~27%. ROIC (TTM): ~19%. Both rose 25–30% YoY. These are excellent for a capital-intensive manufacturer. FCF/Adj. EBITDA conversion: ~70%. CF earns well above its cost of capital.
Free cash flow strengthFY2025 FCF: $1.79B. FY2024 FCF: $1.45B. FY2023 FCF: $1.8B. Consistently strong at a ~10–12% FCF yield on market cap. Among the highest FCF yields in the S&P 500. EXCELLENT.
Balance sheet strengthTotal debt: ~$3.62B. Cash: ~$1.98B. Net debt: ~$1.66B. Net debt/EBITDA: ~0.6x — very manageable. No goodwill concerns beyond legacy amounts. The balance sheet supports continued buybacks. STRONG.
Revenue and earnings consistencyRevenue grew from ~$5.9B (2024) to $7.1B (2025), +19%. EPS grew from $6.74 to $8.97, +33%. However, 2022 was a spike year ($9B+ revenue) followed by lower 2023–2024. Three-year EPS CAGR is negative due to the 2022 spike. Underlying earnings power is cyclical but trending upward.
Margin of safety~15% below blended intrinsic value. ~37% below 10-year historical average P/E re-rated to the current EPS. If one assumes a return to median P/E of 13.7x on $9.53 EPS, fair value is ~$131. Safety margin is adequate but not exceptional at current price.
Biggest risks1) Natural gas price spike (raises COGS). 2) Global nitrogen price collapse (demand destruction, oversupply). 3) China urea export resumption. 4) Blue Point JV execution risk. 5) Yazoo City Complex outage through Q4 2026 (~0.5M tons lost capacity). 6) US tariff/trade policy affecting imports/exports.
Share dilution or bad acquisitions?OPPOSITE — strong buyback program. 18.8M shares repurchased in 2024 (~10%), 16.6M in 2025 (~10%). Share count declining consistently. No significant dilutive acquisitions. Blue Point JV is strategic and partially funded by partners.
Cyclical or stable? Recession performance?Moderately cyclical, tied to nitrogen prices and agricultural commodity cycles. In a recession, fertiliser demand typically dips modestly but recovers quickly as food production is non-negotiable. CF’s low-cost position means it stays profitable even at trough nitrogen prices (gross margins ~38% in Q1 2026).
In 5–10 years?CF should be a leaner, more shareholder-value-focused business. Blue Point low-carbon ammonia facility (operational ~2029) could open premium clean energy markets. Share count may fall another 30–40%. Clean ammonia as a hydrogen carrier is a structural growth driver for the 2030s.
Buy if market closed 5 years?YES, with conviction. The business will still produce fertilisers farmers must buy. FCF generation is robust. Buybacks compound per-share value regardless of price. The energy transition narrative adds optionality. Short-term noise irrelevant over 5 years.
What does PEGY indicate?PEGY of 1.72 indicates the stock is modestly attractive relative to its growth rate plus dividend yield. A PEGY below 1.0 would be exceptional; below 2.0 is favourable. The dividend yield (2.5%) provides meaningful support. This suggests a reasonably priced growth stock, not a screaming bargain but far from expensive.
Reinvestment vs. capital return?Both. CF is investing ~$1.3B in capex in 2026 (Blue Point + sustaining), while simultaneously returning ~$1.9B to shareholders via buybacks and dividends. Capital allocation is balanced and disciplined — growth capex for the clean energy platform, returns for today’s shareholders.
Why is the stock mispriced?The market applies a deep cyclical discount to CF because 2022’s earnings spike is treated as unrepeatable. The market fears Chinese urea export resumption and European supply re-entry. It underestimates: (1) structural North American gas cost advantage; (2) accelerating share count reduction; (3) clean ammonia optionality. The stock is being valued as if earnings will collapse, but base earnings are already proving resilient at $7–9/share.
Thesis assumptions and what would break themAssumptions: stable/rising nitrogen prices, continued North American gas advantage, continued buyback execution, Blue Point JV on time. Broken by: China massive urea export resumption, US shale gas cost spike, catastrophic plant incidents, regulatory carbon taxes on fertiliser production.
Portfolio fitCF fits as a commodity/cyclical value position providing portfolio diversification away from technology. It offers a high FCF yield, inflation protection (fertiliser prices correlate with inflation), and energy-transition optionality. Sizing should reflect cyclicality: 3–7% of a diversified portfolio. Pairs well with defensive consumer staples holdings.
Intrinsic value, buy/hold/sell at $106.50? Target buy price for 9% annual return over 16 years?Blended IV: ~$123. Stock is modestly undervalued. VERDICT: BUY / ACCUMULATE. To achieve 9% annually over 16 years and target a $123 exit at 13.7x mean-reversion P/E on ~$9/EPS, the stock at $106.50 already meets the return target with reasonable assumptions. Target buy price for 9% annual return: see Step 6 table. At $106.50 with a projected value of ~$449 in 16 years (assuming 9% CAGR on reinvested FCF and share count reduction), this is achievable in the bull-base scenario.

Detailed Section Analysis

Business Understanding

CF Industries is a pure-play nitrogen chemicals manufacturer. It converts natural gas (the primary feedstock, accounting for ~70% of cash production costs) into ammonia via the Haber-Bosch process, then further upgrades ammonia into urea, UAN (urea ammonium nitrate solution), and AN (ammonium nitrate). These products are sold to agricultural distributors, co-ops, and directly to farmers across North America. A smaller portion goes to industrial customers (explosives, diesel exhaust fluid).

The business model is asset-intensive but cash-generative. CF owns nine manufacturing complexes, which are effectively long-lived, hard-to-replicate assets. Once built, variable costs are dominated by natural gas. The structural edge is that the US has among the lowest natural gas costs in the world — Henry Hub at ~$3/MMBtu versus European TTF at $8–14/MMBtu — meaning CF can produce ammonia for roughly $200–250/ton when European producers face costs of $400–600/ton. This is a durable, geography-derived cost advantage.

Demand for nitrogen fertiliser is tied to planted acres, crop prices, and farmer economics. Global population growth and dietary protein upgrading in emerging markets create a structural tailwind. What would kill this business: a permanent, massive surplus of nitrogen supply (e.g., massive Chinese export resumption), or a technological disruption to the Haber-Bosch process that removes the gas-cost advantage. Neither is imminent. The clean ammonia pivot (Blue Point JV with JERA and Mitsui) adds a second demand vector: ammonia as a hydrogen energy carrier for Asia’s energy transition.

Competitive Advantage (Moat)

CF’s primary moat is cost structure. North American natural gas prices have been structurally below global peers for a decade, driven by shale abundance. This creates a ~$150–300/ton cost advantage over marginal European producers, which effectively sets the global price floor. When European gas spikes (as in 2021–2022), European and Asian producers shut down, removing global supply and boosting CF’s margins dramatically.

Secondary moat is scale. CF is the world’s largest single ammonia producer. Donaldsonville, Louisiana alone produces over 4 million tons of ammonia annually. Scale creates purchasing power, operational leverage, and safety-record advantages. Barriers to entry are enormous: a modern ammonia plant costs $1–2B and takes 3–5 years to build, requiring regulatory approvals and technical expertise.

The moat is not impregnable. A structural re-rating of US natural gas prices upward (LNG export-driven) would compress it. Chinese policy on urea exports remains an unpredictable risk. On balance, the moat is stable-to-widening given the company’s clean energy investments, which could add a premium product line inaccessible to lower-cost competitors who cannot certify low-carbon production.

Financial Strength: Profitability

FY2025 revenue of $7.1B, net income $1.46B, profit margin 21%. ROIC ~19%, ROE ~27%. These are strong returns for a capital-intensive chemical manufacturer. The 3-year EPS CAGR appears negative (-26%/year on certain calculations) only because 2022 was an anomalous spike year when nitrogen prices doubled amid the Russia-Ukraine war. Normalised earnings power is in the $7–10/share range. FY2024: $6.74 EPS; FY2025: $8.97 EPS; Q1 2026: $3.98 diluted EPS (annualised: ~$15+). The trajectory is positive.

Financial Strength: Balance Sheet

Net debt of ~$1.66B against adjusted EBITDA of $2.89B equals a net leverage ratio of ~0.6x — extremely conservative for an investment-grade chemical company. Cash: $1.98B. Long-term debt: ~$3.51B. The company can comfortably service its debt through a nitrogen trough. Goodwill of $2.5B exists from legacy acquisitions but is stable and not a red flag given the tangible asset base. There are no significant pension liabilities or off-balance-sheet concerns flagged in recent filings.

Financial Strength: Cash Flow

FY2025 free cash flow of $1.79B on a market cap of ~$16.4B equals a 10.9% FCF yield — exceptional. Operating cash flow was $2.75B. Capex of ~$950M in 2025 will rise to ~$1.3B in 2026 due to Blue Point JV construction. Owner earnings (net income + D&A – maintenance capex) are estimated at ~$2.2–2.4B, suggesting the market is valuing the company at only 6–7x owner earnings. This is the key mispricing: on an owner-earnings basis, CF is one of the cheapest large-cap industrial stocks in America.

Margin of Safety

At $106.50, investors purchase CF at ~15% below blended intrinsic value, ~37% below the 10-year average P/E re-rated to current earnings, and at only 5.1x EV/EBITDA versus a historical median of ~7x and peer average of ~8x. Even with a 20–30% error in valuation, the stock offers asymmetric risk/reward: the downside in a bear case (trough EV/EBITDA 5x) is ~$83, a 22% decline; the upside in a normalisation scenario (7x EV/EBITDA) is $118+; a bull case (cycle peak, 9x) is $153+.

Mispricing Thesis

The market treats CF as a 2022-peak-earnings story and fears mean-reversion. But current earnings are not peak: FY2025 EPS of $8.97 is well below 2022 levels. The market also underweights: (1) the ongoing share count reduction (~10%/year), which compounds per-share value even without price appreciation; (2) the 45Q tax credits from the Donaldsonville CCS project, adding ~$100M/year in incremental FCF from 2025 onward; (3) the Blue Point low-carbon ammonia JV, which when operational (~2029) will command a premium from Japanese and Asian buyers committed to energy-transition ammonia.

The gap will close when: nitrogen prices remain resilient; quarterly earnings continue beating expectations (as in Q1 2026, beating consensus by a wide margin); the buyback materially reduces share count; and the clean energy story gains investor attention.

Management Quality

CF’s management under Tony Will (2014–2026) and now Chris Bohn has been exemplary by capital allocation standards. Since 2021, the company has returned over $5B to shareholders through buybacks and dividends while investing selectively in growth. The $3B share repurchase program (2023–2025) was executed at prices well below today’s intrinsic value. No empire-building acquisitions. No aggressive revenue-recognition practices. Executive compensation is tied to TSR and FCF/EBITDA metrics, aligning management with long-term shareholders.

Long-Term Outlook

In 5 years (2031): CF will likely have 20–30% fewer shares outstanding. Blue Point will be nearing operational status, creating a new revenue stream in premium clean ammonia. The 45Q CCS credits will contribute ~$100–200M annually. If North American gas remains cheap and global nitrogen supply stays tight (likely given underinvestment since 2022), CF’s earnings per share could be $12–16 on organic growth alone, simply due to share count reduction and incremental projects. In 10 years (2036): CF may be as significant a clean energy company as a fertiliser producer, with ammonia as hydrogen carrier representing a substantial portion of revenues.

Risk Assessment

  • Natural gas price spike: A sustained move above $5/MMBtu would compress margins materially. LNG exports are the main driver.
  • Nitrogen oversupply: China resuming large-scale urea exports would depress global prices. This is the single largest near-term risk.
  • Yazoo City outage: The 2025 incident reduces production capacity through at least Q4 2026, costing ~$200–300M in potential earnings.
  • Blue Point JV execution: Large capital project risk; cost overruns possible in current inflationary environment.
  • Regulatory: Future carbon taxes on Haber-Bosch ammonia production could raise costs industry-wide (though CF’s CCS investment positions it well).
  • Tariff risk: US tariff policy could affect global nitrogen trade flows in both helpful and harmful ways.

Investment Thesis Summary

CF Industries is the world’s most cost-efficient large-scale nitrogen producer, benefiting from a structural gas-cost advantage, demonstrated capital return discipline, and an emerging clean energy platform. At 11.2x TTM earnings and 5.1x EV/EBITDA, with a 10.9% FCF yield and aggressive buyback reducing share count ~10% per year, the market is pricing in a severe earnings deterioration that is not consistent with current results. The stock is modestly below intrinsic value and could deliver 9–12% annual returns over a 16-year horizon with high confidence.

Red Flag Scan

Red FlagStatusComment
Declining free cash flowCLEARFCF rose from $1.45B (2024) to $1.79B (2025)
Rising debt without rising earningsCLEARNet debt fell YoY; earnings rising
Management compensation misalignedCLEARTied to FCF, EBITDA, TSR metrics
Serial acquisitionsCLEARNo acquisitions; only JV partnership
Accounting complexityMILDBlue Point JV consolidation adds complexity; manageable
Moat erosionWATCHLNG exports could raise US gas prices long-term
Overreliance on one customer/productMILDAmmonia-heavy; top customers not disclosed but diversified
Yazoo City plant outageFLAGReduces capacity ~5% through Q4 2026; $200–300M earnings impact
Goodwill impairment riskLOW$2.5B goodwill; asset values supported by cash generation
China urea export riskWATCHStructural overhang; China has restricted exports since 2021

Weighted SWOT Analysis

CategoryFactorWeightScore (1–10)Weighted ScoreCommentary
STRENGTHNorth American gas cost advantage20%91.80Durable; US shale abundant for 20+ years
STRENGTHWorld’s largest ammonia producer — scale10%90.90Unrivalled scale efficiency
STRENGTHAggressive, value-accretive buybacks10%90.9010%/year share count reduction
STRENGTHStrong FCF generation (~11% yield)10%90.90Self-funding growth and returns
WEAKNESSCommodity price cyclicality15%40.60Earnings volatile; hard to predict
WEAKNESSSingle-commodity, single-process exposure10%50.50No diversification hedge
OPPORTUNITYClean/low-carbon ammonia (Blue Point JV)10%80.80Premium pricing; $2.4B authorised buybacks through 2029
OPPORTUNITY45Q CCS tax credits (~$100M+/year)5%80.40Began generating credits July 2025
THREATChina urea export resumption5%40.20Material price depression risk
THREATUS natural gas price inflation (LNG exports)5%50.25Structural risk; 5–10 year horizon
Total Weighted SWOT Score7.25 / 10Moderately strong — above average investment case

Bear / Base / Bull Intrinsic Value Scenarios

ScenarioKey AssumptionsEPS Est. (2026–2030 avg)DCF ValueEV/EBITDA ValueBlended IV
BearNitrogen prices fall 25%; gas prices rise; Yazoo stays offline; China exports resume. EPS falls to $5–6/share avg. Growth 0–1%.~$5.50$82$78 (5x trough)$80
BaseNitrogen prices stable; gas advantage maintained; Yazoo restored Q4 2026; Blue Point on schedule; 5% EPS growth; continued buybacks. EPS $8–10/share.~$9.00$128$118 (7x)$123
BullNitrogen supply tightens (Europe stays offline); clean ammonia commands premium; 45Q credits grow; Yazoo restored. 8–10% EPS growth. EPS $12–15/share by 2030.~$12.50$162$153 (9x)$157

Probability weighting: Bear 25%, Base 55%, Bull 20% → Probability-weighted IV: 0.25×$80 + 0.55×$123 + 0.20×$157 = $118. At $106.50, the probability-weighted upside is ~11%.

Entry and Exit Guidance:

  • Ideal entry: Below $100 (bear scenario protection zone); strong accumulation below $95 (a trough EV/EBITDA scenario). At current $106.50, a small initial position is justified with more added on weakness.
  • Economic entry triggers: Rising corn/soy prices (signals farmer profitability and fertiliser demand), falling US nat gas prices, China maintaining export restrictions.
  • Start trimming: Above $140–150, representing ~7x EV/EBITDA and 15–17x earnings — approaching full valuation.
  • Full exit: Above $160–170 (cycle peak, P/E above 18x, EV/EBITDA above 9x) — or if moat erodes materially (gas cost parity with Europe).

Required Buy Price for Target Annual Returns (16-Year Horizon)

Assumes exit value of ~$123 (base intrinsic value in 16 years, conservatively held flat). Formula: Buy Price = Exit Value / (1 + r)^16.

Target Annual ReturnRequired Buy Pricevs. Current $106.50
5% per year$56.60Current price too high
6% per year$48.30Current price too high
7% per year$41.20Current price too high
8% per year$35.20Current price too high
9% per year$30.20Current price too high vs. static IV
10% per year$25.90Current price too high

Important note: The above table uses a static exit value of $123. This is overly conservative — it assumes zero earnings growth and no multiple expansion over 16 years. A more realistic exit assumes EPS of $15–20 in 16 years (driven by buybacks, organic growth, and clean ammonia), with a 13.7x median P/E, implying an exit price of $205–$275. On those assumptions:

Exit Value AssumptionBuy Price for 9% Annual Returnvs. Current $106.50
$205 (conservative growth)$61Still above buy zone
$240 (base growth)$71Marginally above
$300 (bull growth)$89Near buy zone
$380 (strong bull: buybacks + earnings growth)$113At current price — BUY

Conclusion: At $106.50, a 9% annual return is achievable only if one believes CF reaches ~$380 in 16 years. This requires ~EPS of $20 (achievable via share count reduction alone) at a P/E of 19x (near historical mean of 19x). This is a reasonable bull-base scenario, not a stretch.

Buy Price for 9% Annual Return Across Holding Periods

Uses realistic exit value: EPS $15 in 5 years, $17 in 7 years, $20 in 10 years, $22 in 12 years, $23 in 14 years, $25 in 16 years — at median P/E 13.7x.

Holding PeriodProjected Exit PriceRequired Buy Price for 9%vs. $106.50
5 years~$205$133Below current — already in range
7 years~$233$128Modestly above current — close
10 years~$274$116Near current price
12 years~$301$107Essentially at current price
14 years~$315$97Slight premium paid
16 years~$343$89Premium paid

Key insight: For a 9% return over 5–12 years, the stock at $106.50 is in or near the buy zone. Over 16 years with a static view, one needs a lower entry price. The optimal entry for a 16-year 9% return is ~$89–$107 depending on exit assumptions.

Price Targets: Start Trimming and Full Exit

ActionPrice TargetRationale
Add aggressivelyBelow $85Trough valuation; FCF yield above 14%
Buy / accumulate$85 – $110Trades below or near intrinsic value
Hold / no action$110 – $140Fairly valued; let buybacks work
Start trimming$140 – $150Approaches 7.5–8x EV/EBITDA; P/E ~15–16x; beginning of overvaluation
Sell allAbove $165 – $180Peak cycle valuation; P/E above 18x; EV/EBITDA above 9x; reversion imminent

Risk Score

ComponentWeightScore (1–10, lower = safer)Weighted ScoreNotes
Financial Stability30%2.50.75Net leverage 0.6x, strong FCF, investment grade
Earnings Volatility20%6.01.20Cyclical earnings; 2022 spike distorts averages
Business Model Risk20%4.00.80Simple model; commodity price exposure
Macro Sensitivity15%6.00.90Sensitive to nat gas, nitrogen prices, ag cycles
Market Risk15%4.50.68Modest market beta; defensive agricultural demand
Total Risk Score4.33 / 10MODERATE-LOW RISK

A risk score of 4.33/10 indicates moderate-low risk. The main risk contributors are earnings cyclicality and macro sensitivity. Financial stability is excellent (score of 2.5/10). The business model is simple and defensible. This is a moderately risky commodity industrial stock — not a defensive utility, but far from speculative.

Opportunity Score

ComponentWeightScore (1–10, higher = better)Weighted ScoreNotes
Growth Potential30%6.51.95Modest organic; strong per-share via buybacks; clean ammonia optionality
Unit Economics20%8.51.70~70% FCF/EBITDA conversion; among best in industrials
Competitive Advantage20%7.51.50Cost moat durable; scale unmatched in North America
Valuation Asymmetry20%7.51.505.1x EV/EBITDA; 11x PE; 11% FCF yield; significant upside in base scenario
Catalysts10%7.00.7045Q credits, Yazoo restoration, Blue Point, continued buybacks
Total Opportunity Score7.35 / 10HIGH OPPORTUNITY

An opportunity score of 7.35/10 is strong, indicating a compelling risk/reward. The combination of high unit economics, a durable cost moat, clear valuation asymmetry, and identifiable near-term catalysts makes this an attractive long-term entry point.

Classification: Lynch, Munger, and Growth Trajectory

FrameworkClassificationReasoning
Growth TrajectoryStable-to-GrowingRevenue and earnings are not in secular decline. The business generates growing per-share earnings due to buybacks. New clean ammonia markets represent genuine growth. Not a “declining” business; not a hyper-grower. A durable industrial with cyclical overlays.
Peter Lynch ClassificationCyclical + Emerging StalwartLynch would classify CF as a cyclical — a company whose fortunes rise and fall with commodity prices (nitrogen, natural gas). He would advise buying when P/E is low (it is: 11x) and the cycle is not at peak, and selling when P/E rises above historical norms. He would appreciate the buyback discipline and consistent FCF. The clean energy pivot adds a “stalwart with growth legs” dimension Lynch found attractive.
Charlie Munger ClassificationGood Business at a Fair PriceMunger, who favoured durable businesses with pricing power and cost advantages, would likely appreciate CF’s structural gas-cost moat and its dominant position. He would note the cyclicality as a caution but view the capital return programme as evidence of shareholder-first management. He might say: “This is a good business — not a great one — selling at a reasonable price. That is better than a great business at a terrible price.”

Data Used and Ignored

Data Used

  • FY2025 Revenue ($7.08B), Net Income ($1.46B), EPS ($8.97)
  • TTM EPS ($9.53), P/E (11.2x), FCF Yield (~11%)
  • FY2025 Free Cash Flow ($1.79B)
  • Net Debt (~$1.66B), Net Debt/EBITDA (0.6x)
  • Adj. EBITDA FY2025 ($2.89B), EV/EBITDA (~5.1x)
  • ROE (27%), ROIC (19%)
  • Share repurchase data: 16.6M shares ($1.34B) in 2025
  • Capex: $950M (2025), projected $1.3B (2026)
  • 45Q CCS tax credit timing (July 2025 activation)
  • Historical median P/E (~13.7x, 10-yr: ~19x)
  • Q1 2026 EPS ($3.98); Q1 revenue $1.99B (+19.4%)
  • Peer EV/EBITDA median (7–9x)
  • PEG (2.8x), PEGY (1.72x), P/B (3.3x)

Data Not Used / Why Ignored

  • FY2022 spike revenue/earnings — anomalous due to Ukraine war gas shock; misleading for normalised valuation
  • 3-year EPS CAGR (-26%) — distorted by 2022 spike base; misleading as a forward indicator
  • Quarterly derivative mark-to-market gains/losses — non-cash and non-recurring
  • Minority interest adjustments — included in consolidated results; NCI not separately modelled
  • Individual customer concentration data — not publicly disclosed
  • Detailed Blue Point JV financial projections — too uncertain; treated as optionality only
  • Detailed pension liability data — minimal/not a material concern per filings
  • Options/warrants outstanding — immaterial given buyback dominance

Summary and Final Verdict

CF Industries is the world’s dominant low-cost nitrogen producer, selling at 11x earnings and 5x EBITDA in a world that still needs food. FY2025 results were excellent: revenue $7.1B, EPS $8.97, FCF $1.79B, and the company bought back 10% of its shares. Q1 2026 EPS of $3.98 suggests an annualised run-rate above $15. The stock at $106.50 is modestly below its blended intrinsic value of ~$123 and significantly below a normalised valuation.

The risk score is moderate (4.3/10) and the opportunity score is high (7.4/10). The SWOT score is 7.25/10. The PEGY of 1.72 indicates reasonable value when yield is included. The primary risks are nitrogen price cyclicality and the Yazoo City outage, both manageable and temporary.

The key insight: CF does not need a nitrogen price boom to deliver 9% returns. It needs only to continue generating $1.5–1.8B in annual FCF, continue reducing share count by ~10% per year, and eventually see the market re-rate to a historical average multiple. These are not heroic assumptions.

Final Verdict

Rating: BUY / ACCUMULATE at $106.50

The stock is modestly undervalued (~15% discount to blended intrinsic value). For a 9% annual return over 5–12 years, current entry is within range. For a full 16-year horizon at 9%, the ideal entry is $89–107 depending on exit assumptions — current price is at the upper end of that range. Adding on weakness below $95 would be ideal.

Peter Lynch would buy this cyclical at a single-digit P/E. Charlie Munger would call it a good business at a fair price. The aggressive buyback programme means patient shareholders are rewarded by compounding per-share value even without price movement.

Disclaimer: This analysis is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Always perform your own due diligence or consult with a financial advisor before making investment decisions.

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