Contributing Members
Content is delayed by one month. Upgrade your membership to unlock all content. Click for membership options.
#Bear Case
Added 2 weeks ago

Bear Case Considerations

A bear case for ARB requires intellectual honesty. This is one of the highest quality businesses on the ASX, with a 50 year track record, no debt, dominant domestic market share and a genuinely wide moat. The bear case is not that ARB is a bad business. It is that the current growth narrative depends heavily on assumptions that may not play out, and that even after a severe de-rating, the risks have not fully resolved.

At the time of writing ARB trades at $17.88, implying a market capitalisation of approximately $1.49 billion. The stock has fallen more than 55% from its peak above $55 in January 2022. The market has already repriced significant risk. The question is whether that repricing is sufficient, or whether the structural headwinds justify further downside.

The US is the thesis and it is unproven at scale

The entire re-rating argument for ARB rests on the US expansion succeeding. The Australian aftermarket business is mature, revenue was down 1.7% in H1 FY26 and has been broadly flat for several years. ARB's 10 year revenue CAGR has moderated from approximately 19% since its 1987 listing to approximately 8% over the past decade. Without the US delivering meaningful earnings growth, ARB is a high-quality but slow growing domestic company, and the question becomes what multiple that deserves.

The ORW/4WP acquisition was made from a business in Chapter 11 bankruptcy. ARB and ORW moved quickly to restructure, closing 5 of the initial 53 stores, transitioning the ERP system and integrating approximately 500 employees, and early results are genuinely encouraging. But 48 stores across only 9 US states is a thin foothold in a country with a truck aftermarket estimated at 10 times the size of Australia's. The store-in-store ARB display rollout is still in early stages, with initial pilot stores in California, Nevada, Colorado, Texas and Florida only now being assessed and expanded. Success in 6 pilot stores does not confirm success across 48 stores, let alone the broader US market.

The American consumer's relationship with truck accessories is structurally different from Australia's. US buyers have historically shopped by category, Warn for winches, Fox for shocks, Method for wheels, rather than doing a full ARB-branded build. ARB's thesis requires changing that behaviour at scale, which is a cultural and marketing challenge as much as a distribution one. There is no guarantee it works on the timeline or at the margins the market may be expecting.

The AUD/THB exchange rate is improving but remains a risk to monitor

One of the biggest drivers of profit compression in FY25 and H1 FY26 was the weakness of the Australian dollar against the Thai Baht. A significant proportion of ARB's products are manufactured in Thailand, so costs are denominated in Thai Baht while revenue is predominantly in Australian dollars. When the Baht strengthens or the AUD weakens, margins compress directly and immediately.

The picture has improved materially since the depths of 2025. The AUD/THB rate has recovered from the 21.0 to 21.5 Baht to the dollar range that prevailed through most of calendar 2025 to approximately 23.4 Baht to the dollar as at May 2026, a roughly 10% improvement in ARB's purchasing power for Thai manufacturing costs. A year ago one Australian dollar bought approximately 21.28 Baht. Today it buys approximately 23.4 Baht. That is a meaningful shift and if sustained represents genuine margin relief heading into 2H FY26 and FY27.

Management has also hedged 2H FY26 Baht exposure at rates described as slightly more favourable than the prior corresponding period, so the near-term earnings impact should be visible in the second half result.

The residual bear case on currency is not the current rate but the volatility risk. The 90 day range has been 21.88 to 23.47, illustrating that the rate can move materially in short periods. ARB has no ability to control the AUD/THB rate and a reversal back toward 21 Baht would immediately re-impose the margin pressure seen in H1 FY26. The structural dependency on Thai manufacturing remains, it is the source of ARB's cost competitiveness, but it also means the company's margins are permanently exposed to a currency pair that most Australian investors do not naturally monitor. The improvement as at May 2026 genuinely weakens this pillar of the bear case, but it should be monitored rather than assumed away.

Discretionary exposure in a prolonged consumer downturn

ARB sells accessories for trucks, discretionary products attached to discretionary vehicle purchases. The business is not recession proof. The only prior year of meaningful negative revenue growth in ARB's listed history was 1991, during an Australian recession, when domestic sales fell 6% and profit declined 73%. Revenue recovered, but the profit sensitivity to volume was severe and illustrative.

The current environment shares some of those characteristics. Australian consumer sentiment remains soft. New vehicle sales of ARB's core platforms, Toyota Hilux, Ford Ranger and Isuzu D-Max, were all down 17% in FY25. H1 FY26 showed the Ford Ranger down 1%, Ford Everest down 9%, LandCruiser 70 Series down 12% and Isuzu D-Max down 13%. When fewer new vehicles enter the fleet, the addressable market for accessories shrinks in the near term and ARB's fitting operations, which are labour-intensive and largely fixed-cost, become underutilised.

A prolonged period of weak new vehicle sales, combined with currency headwinds, could see earnings stagnate for multiple years even if the underlying business quality remains completely intact.

OEM revenue is concentrated and lumpy

OEM sales represent approximately 8% of revenue but declined 38.2% in H1 FY26, worse than management guided at the October 2025 AGM. The explanation is plausible. OEM customers overstocked in 2H FY25, then vehicle sales weakened, so orders dried up. But the episode illustrates that OEM revenue is materially lumpier and harder to forecast than aftermarket sales. A contract with Toyota or Ford is a genuine competitive advantage, but it also creates customer concentration risk. If either relationship changed through a contract not being renewed, a model mix shift or an OEM moving to an alternative supplier, the revenue impact would be immediate and visible in the result.

The fitter technician shortage is a structural operational constraint

ARB explicitly flags in both the FY25 annual report and the H1 FY26 result that fitting operations are impacted by a shortage of fitter technicians. This is not a temporary post-COVID problem. It has persisted across multiple years of reporting. Fitting is central to ARB's retail model as it generates service revenue, ensures products are properly installed on complex modern vehicles and locks customers into the ARB ecosystem. A structural inability to scale fitting capacity caps store throughput regardless of how many stores are opened or how healthy the order book is.

The valuation question after a significant de-rating

ARB historically traded at 25 to 35 times earnings, reflecting genuine quality. The stock has now fallen more than 55% from its 2022 peak, trading at $17.88 with a market cap of approximately $1.49 billion. At approximately 83.5 million shares on issue and annualising H1 FY26 underlying NPAT of $43.2 million, a full year FY26 result of approximately $85 to $95 million seems reasonable if the second half recovers as guided. That implies a forward PE of approximately 16 to 18 times, a significant discount to the historical range.

The bear case on valuation is not that ARB is obviously expensive today. It is that a further miss, a 2H FY26 margin recovery that falls short of guidance or OEM sales weaker than expected, could compress earnings and sentiment simultaneously from a price that already reflects considerable disappointment.

Competitive intensification in the US

Fox Factory Holdings is the most comparable publicly listed US competitor, with approximately $1.4 billion in revenue and an aggressive acquisition strategy spanning FOX shocks, Method Race Wheels, BDS Suspension and truck upfit brands. Fox Factory is better capitalised for the US market and has deep home-ground distribution advantages. The Made in USA narrative, which brands like Addictive Desert Designs use effectively for Jeep and Ford Raptor fitments, resonates with American buyers in ways that ARB's Australian heritage does not automatically replicate.

US tariffs on steel, aluminium and automotive products, flagged explicitly as a headwind by ARB management in FY25, directly increase input costs for products manufactured in Thailand and shipped to the US. If tariffs escalate or become permanent structural policy, they impair the economics of ARB's US business model, which currently relies on Thai-manufactured product shipped to the US rather than local manufacturing.

EVs and the BYD Shark represent a long-term structural question

ARB openly acknowledges in the H1 FY26 report that it is monitoring accessory demand for the BYD Shark. The electric pick-up presents a genuine medium-term uncertainty. ARB's core products including bull bars, suspension lifts, snorkels and long-range fuel tanks were designed for and validated on internal combustion engine 4WDs. Electric pick-ups have different weight distributions, different underbody configurations, no combustion air intake requiring a snorkel and different safety system integration requirements. Accessory attachment rates for new EV entrants are unknown and the customer demographic may differ from ARB's traditional buyer.

This is not an immediate threat as ICE trucks will dominate the relevant vehicle fleet for at least a decade, but it is a genuine long-term moat question. ARB's proprietary fitment data, accumulated across 50 years of ICE vehicle development and representing one of its deepest competitive advantages, must be rebuilt from scratch for each new EV or hybrid platform.

Summary

The bear case for ARB is not that the business will fail. It is that the next two to three years may deliver earnings that continue to disappoint relative to expectations in a business where the valuation, even after a greater than 55% fall from peak, may not yet fully reflect the duration of the headwinds. The combination of currency exposure, soft domestic new vehicle sales, OEM lumpiness, a US expansion that is progressing but genuinely early stage and a fitter technician shortage creates a scenario where even a high quality business generates flat or declining earnings for an extended period.

Read More
#Bargain or value trap?
Last edited 3 weeks ago

There’s a lot of interest in ARB from the Strawman community recently now that the share price has fallen 54% from its twelve month high of $40.82 in August 2025 to a 6 year low of $17.61. In November 2021 ARB shares reached an all time high of $54.53

The 5 year share price chart looks tragic!

ec9f63c4c048d3012a823332396923372b44c1.jpeg

At just over $18 dollars, the share price looks cheap…but is it a bargain?

Why is ARB trading where it is?

In FY2021 the NPAT margin was 18% and ROE was 23.2%. Fast forward to FY2025 and the NPAT was 13% and ROE 12.7%. What’s in store for this year…and the future?

FY2026 consensus is for revenue of $731 million and NPAT of $86 million (EPS $1.03 per share with 83.7 million shares), making the NPAT margin 11.8%. Current equity is $734 million ($8.77 per share). Coincidently, that puts FY2026 ROE at 11.8% also. That’s half the ROE achieved in FY2021. That’s OK but not amazing. ARB’s quality metrics have deteriorated significantly over 5 years.

What about the future? What needs to change to get ARB performing again? Margins and ROE need to improve while the sales keep growing. How likely is this to happen?

d2ff983f159ee52b7359ac0fd8994174765432.jpeg

Looking at the 1H2026 results it appears revenue is flat and costs have increased. One of the largest cost increases was materials and consumables which were 4.6% higher pcp. Is this likely to improve? With current inflationary pressures and higher interest rates I don’t think so.

What about sales? Sales were under pressure last half due to a challenging market for 4x4 pick up and SUV sales.

d4c100d49feca7f7ff3fad6124ae14a0ab4c8f.jpeg

April new car sales data shows that sales are about to get a whole lot worse in 2H2026 for the category ARB is targeting.

Referring to a recent AFR article https://www.afr.com/policy/energy-and-climate/diesel-ute-sales-fall-off-a-cliff-as-fuel-prices-bite-20260505-p5ztwb

“Sales of some of Australia’s most popular diesel utes and four-wheel drives have fallen sharply as the continued spike in fuel prices prompted by the conflict in Iran pushed electric vehicle purchases to another new monthly record in April.”

“The fuel price increase is also stifling consumer interest in large diesel utes and four-wheel drives, with popular models such as Ford’s Ranger and Everest and Toyota’s HiLux and Prado all experiencing substantial falls in year-on-year sales.”

“The biggest loser was the HiLux, which had a 31 per cent drop-off in sales relative to April 2025, followed by the Everest, which lost more than 29 per cent, according to data from the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries (FCAI) and the Electric Vehicle Council.”

“Overall sales of petrol cars in April were down 30 per cent, while diesel vehicle sales were down 21 per cent.”

My Take

When I look at ARB today, I see more headwinds than tailwinds. If I assume the operating environment does improve slightly and ARB achieves FY2027 NPAT consensus of $1.16 per share, I can calculate a rough value based on that. Using McNiven’s formula assuming equity of $8.77 per share, ROE 13.2% ($1.16/$8.77), 65% payout ratio, dividends fully franked , and requiring a ROI of 10%, I get a valuation of $16. I generally use higher required ROI than 10% so the business doesn’t excite me at the current share price. Nor does the near term for ARB with higher inflation, higher interest rates and higher fuel prices for the foreseeable future.

It’s an avoid for me until there are some signs of recovery.

Read More
#Market Update
Added 4 months ago

ARB reporting some less than desirable results this morning for the half year ending 31DEC25. Worth nothing this had been flagged in their AGM.

Headline Figures are: total sales revenue down 1%, Australian OEM Sales down 38.2%, Export channels up 8.8% with the US market up 26.1%. Underlying profit before tax down 16.3%. $60 Mil in cash and no debt.

Held IRL and on SM, I'm encouraged by the uptick in sales to the US, and find the explanations behind the drawback in the financials and the Aussy market reasonable.

Shareprice is down 12% at market open and 20% over the last 12 months, might be a chance to top up. I'm not worried yet but keen to hear the bear case if anyone is?

Market-Update.PDF

Read More
#Fun math (silver linings)
Added 2 months ago

ARB hitting some fun math this morning (gotta look at the bright side as I'm down about 17% on it).

Anyway, last quarterly earnings on Google Finance were 21.09M, annualized out that's 84.36M. Their shares outstanding is 83.46M, which gives an earnings per share of 1 (or close enough to), and makes the current share price match the P/E ratio ( about $20).

For what it's worth I suspect it drops from here, oil shocks probably not helping new vehicle delivery, big 4x4 purchases or retirees wanting to spend up on a 4x4 and do the big lap.

Still held SM and IRL, it's a 7% position after a recent top up.

Read More
#Spotlight
Added 5 days ago

Just sending through my apologies for not attending the ARB spotlight meeting tomorrow. I'm heading over to my Dad's for State of Origin sausage sandwiches with his retirement village buddies!

But you have my 2c in the form of the valuation I submitted. I look forward to watching the recording of the meeting.

Read More
#History
Added 3 weeks ago

A hodgepodge collection of charts and thoughts on ARB. Full disclosure, I own it and also have the investing "P Plates" on, so I know just enough to be dangerous. Do your own research as always.

(I'm not sure if it's a good way to do it but all 2026 numbers are the 1st half results x2)

For me ARB has existed in three modes. From beginning until 2020 is was a steady, reliable compound growth machine. 2021 bought a big step up in revenue, margin and earnings. Then 2021 until present has seen slow/flat revenue growth, with a draw back on margin and earnings. You have to zoom out a fair bit to see that story, but it's a very different looking company depending on how far out you zoom.

a1c3961028f77e0c942d9c63d86654e0bcf9de.png

-Recent share price has loosely followed margin. The big questions for me are; is the margin dropping a sign of something wrong under the hood, a return to normal post a COVID/money printing boom, or customer behaviour changing?

The below screen grabs are pretty back of the napkin stuff, data pulled from Commsec, old company reports from the asx site and more recently from the ARB investor page. I built it with no intention of sharing it, I don't think there are errors with the scaling or numbers, but double check it by all means.

REVENUE:

89407dcb5a68bfd844d774c645cf2007e27683.jpeg


NET PROFIT:e14e7890cba61e25109f81c03c78565b856715.jpeg


My framing is that it's a reliable compounder that's returning to normal after a few wild years. I think margin is back to where it was pre 2021 (give or take). They've managed to hold onto most of the 2021 big step up in revenue, haven't sacrificed too much WRT margin, and have nailed the landing on USA expansion. All in a fairly unfriendly world with tariffs, inflation, politics and currency all over the place.

Market sales sectors haven't changed much, a slight move towards less reliance on the Australian market but not drastic.

f83b52a8c0340ecca84384a0ef166469ee6d58.png

f4c6e7de4448458cb78ddd89e25fb66b988ee6.jpeg

That's me, looking at the last 5 years it's going backwards, looking at the last 20 years it's bottom left, top right. Which trend will win out, and is it finally cheap enough to buy into the slow and steady growth if the 20 year trend continues?

Read More
#Management
Added 3 months ago

Two directors have bought about $65k on market each, disclosed on 13/03 and today.

Read More
#Bull Case
Added 3 months ago

Ive had a few chances to purchase ARB at some great prices over the years including $2.40 in the GFC and around $11 during early stages of Covid lockdown. Could this be another opportunity? A fair bit has happened since then with founder stepping down and the changing face of vehicles on the road, so I have a bit to catch up on.

I’m not worried about the ebbs and flows of currency and factory capacity which is spooking the market now. More central to my investment will be long term trends in vehicles on the road, that could impact their market position. For example will they be making parts for Teslas and Chinese vehicles? More to come once I dive in

Theres so many opportunities presenting themselves at the moment. Greed is kicking in. Good time to be a Strawman member!

Read More
Valuation of $22.54
Added 2 weeks ago

Valuation 19/5/26, last close $17.70, fair price $22.54, buy price $18.00

A buy on ARB is a bet on US success. Balancing across possible futures, the current price is attractive. But this stage, I’m not yet confident enough in the US for ARB to force its way into my portfolio.


Bull case

  • Quality business, long-term compounder, strong capital management, founding family members still active on the Board and have meaningful skin in the game.
  • No debt, healthy $59m cash balance.
  • There has only been 4% share dilution over the last 10 years, despite some large investments in overseas manufacturing and sales.
  • They have established a beachhead in the US, where the opportunity is huge, and are achieving early substantial growth.
  • Management believe that some recent headwinds (currency, OEM overstocking) can be managed and unlikely to recur in H2.
  • Valuation:
  • Revenue: From FY27 let’s say ARB can get back to modest growth in Australia, perhaps 4% pa. At this stage I still have to regard the US as an unproven sustainable business, but for now I’ll assume it continues to grow well off a small base. Perhaps exports in total, currently 40% of sales, can continue to grow around 12% pa, with the real workhorse being the US. All up, let’s say growth averages 8% pa over next 5 years. That get’s me to roughly $1.1b in FY31.
  • Profit: The Covid-era margins should be treated as outliers. The average margin over the last couple of years has been 13%. With faster growth coming from lower-margin US, ARB will do well to maintain this margin over the coming years. That will give about $140m NPAT in FY31.
  • Multiple: Over the last 5 years PE has ranged from 17 (now) to 38, averaging around 27. With Australia maturing, the peak PE days are perhaps behind ARB, but with solid ongoing growth in the US we could get back to around 25, not unreasonable for a quality company growing 8% pa.
  • Dilution: Let’s assume historical trend dilution, so around 2% over next 5 years.
  • Dividends: If ARB continues it’s roughly 60% payout ratio, grossed up dividends are likely to be around 3.4% pa.
  • Return: The above stats get’s me to an FY31 share price of $41.41. Discounting 10% pa I get a fair current price of $30.26. Requiring 15% ROI I get a buy price of $24.19. At the last close price of $17.70 I estimate a 22% pa ROI.


Bear case

  • The US was their only market to show meaningful growth. Although the TAM is huge, the market is highly competitive with many established, home-grown, specialist suppliers. There will be significant establishment costs and promotions such that margin in the US is unlikely to match Australia in the medium term and there is a good chance it will never get there.
  • Putting aside SUVs, the 4WD market growth is weak at roughly 3% pa.
  • Simply Wall St shows 16 analysts covering ARB. Personally, this is way beyond my preferred playground. Beyond 2 or 3 analysts, I feel like I start to lose an edge. Not a showstopper, but a reason for additional caution.
  • Valuation:
  • Revenue: ARB has a mature, low growth business in Australia. Overseas growth will face many competitive and structural headwinds and cannot be assumed. Recent growth has been flat, but let’s assume ARB can get back to averaging modest growth around 4%. That get’s me to about $880m in FY31.
  • Profit: With much of the growth coming from the US, where margins are likely to be lower for at least a few years, let’s say FY31 margin is 10%, giving $88m NPAT.
  • Multiple: In a low growth future, ARB is still likely to command a slight premium for its quality, sound balance sheet and dividends, so perhaps a PE of 18.
  • Dilution: As for the bull case, I’ll assume 2% dilution over the next 5 years, representing ARB’s historical trend.
  • Dividends: Continuing their 60% payout ratio, dividends will be roughly 4.7% pa.
  • Return: The above stats get an FY31 share price of $18.48. Discounting 10% pa I get a fair price current price of $14.34. Looking for a 15% pa ROI, I get a buy price of $11.43. At the last close price of $17.70 I estimate a 6% pa ROI.


Base case

  • Weighing evenly across my bull and bear cases, I get an FY31 share price of $29.94, with grossed-up dividends of 4.0%. Discounting 10% I get a fair price of $22.54. Requiring 15% pa I get a buy price of $18.00. At the last close price of $17.70 I estimate a 15% pa ROI.
  • At this point ARB just hits my hurdle of 15%, but doesn’t yet warrant replacing one of my existing higher-conviction holdings. To buy I’d need the price to slide further, or for my bull case to become more likely resulting from a decent Australian recovery to at least some growth, continued strong US growth of >20%, or margin improvement to >12%.


Read More
Valuation of $27.20
Added 3 weeks ago

In preparation for the Deep Dive with @Strawman I've done a valuation for ARB. Sticking with my 'Don't be so Pessimistic' theme for today, I've gone with the positive valuation, using McNivens, a 8% target return and a 5.5% growth rate to get $27.20. I'm reasonably happy with that as it is below the Morningstar 'Fair Value', and well below the record price highs.

At a more rigorous 10% return and 6% growth rate I only get $17.00. While my 6% dividend before franking credits model (patent pending) I only get $11.33.

7c8959cbf8551babd567f93047ab96fee34a09.png

914a4f09495e33d36875e39dd99ddaed5cbe53.png


Read More
#Chart Update & Historical char
Added 5 months ago

Mon 12th Jan

@Bear77 You peaked my interest. W3 is historically the strongest wave up. I noted you comments on US Trade tariffs.

Note: These charts are not time projects just levels they should hit or surpass all going well.

1 month chart

6a635389e5b078a6c44829c280d3479acdc56a.png


3d, 1d Chart

4df09725b3a8846a6cf77b9e9793b32286466e.png

Read More
#History
Added 2 weeks ago

History

The founder — Anthony Ronald Brown (the original ARB)

The company name is literally the founder's initials. Anthony Ronald Brown known as Tony  started ARB in 1975 after returning from a 4WD trip through Cape York, Queensland, frustrated that he couldn't find reliable, quality protective gear for his vehicle. He began making roof racks and bull bars in the family garage in Melbourne, then in early 1976 rented a 1,000 square foot factory in Olive Grove, Ringwood, Victoria, and hired his first employee. ARB Engineering Pty Ltd was formally incorporated on 1 July 1977.

That origin story matters because it explains ARB's product philosophy to this day. It wasn't started by a businessman who spotted a market gap it was started by a 4WD enthusiast who wanted better gear and couldn't find it. That culture of genuine product obsession has persisted through every generation of management.

The 1980s — building the foundation

ARB outgrew Ringwood by 1981 and moved to larger premises, then again in 1986 to a 5,110 square metre workshop in Croydon, 55 times the size of the original factory. By 1983 there were ARB stores in every Australian state.

In 1987 ARB acquired the Roberts Diff Lock and re-launched it as the Air Locker, a pneumatic differential locking system that lets drivers lock and unlock their differentials on demand via a button and onboard air compressor. ARB also developed its own 12V air compressor the same year. No competitor has meaningfully replicated the Air Locker system in nearly 40 years. It became ARB's most defensible product and its calling card in export markets, particularly the US. Critically, the Air Locker was the product that gave ARB a compelling reason to pursue international markets, high value, compact enough to ship affordably, and with no equivalent anywhere in the world.

Also in 1987, ARB listed on the ASX. The listing was partly driven by the need for capital to continue developing and commercialising the Air Locker. Anyone who has held from listing to today has experienced one of the great ASX compounding stories.

In 1988 ARB acquired the Old Man Emu (OME) suspension business. That acquisition, done for a modest sum, became ARB's largest global product line and is almost certainly the company's single best capital allocation decision in its history.

The Brown brothers — a family business

Tony Brown founded ARB with early hands-on help from his two brothers, Roger and Andrew. All three are brothers an important clarification. Roger and Andrew did not inherit the business from Tony in a parent-to-child succession; rather, they were there from nearly the beginning, painting roof racks by hand and building the business alongside Tony.

Roger Brown joined the company formally around 1977 and became Managing Director and Executive Chairman when ARB listed in 1987, a role he held until 2012, a 25-year tenure as MD. He then served as Executive Chairman until 2016, and Non-executive Chairman until 2022 when independent director Robert Fraser took over as chairman. That is 35 years of continuous Brown family leadership at the most senior level.

Under Roger's stewardship ARB compounded at exceptional rates by 2017 revenue had grown at approximately 19% since listing and EBIT at approximately 25%, according to independent analyst research. He oversaw the Thailand manufacturing expansion, the international distribution buildout, OEM relationship development with Toyota and Nissan, and the acquisition of several complementary businesses.

Andrew Brown has been an Executive Director since 1987 essentially his entire working life and became Managing Director in 2012 when Roger transitioned to Executive Chairman. Andrew's era has been defined by three things: accelerating the OEM strategy, including the Ford License Accessory programme and the Toyota Trailhunter partnership in the US; the US expansion strategy through ORW and the 4WP acquisition; and managing ARB through COVID, which paradoxically was a boom period as Australians bought 4WDs and camping equipment in record numbers.

The Brown family's combined shareholding Roger and Andrew together holding approximately 9.9 million shares as at the FY25 annual report, with approximately 4.9 million held in a common vehicle called Rogand Pty Ltd represents roughly 12% of the company. They have retained the vast majority of their position throughout, though they did sell 1 million shares in November 2021 at $49.50 each near the all-time high. That long-term alignment between the family's wealth and shareholder outcomes is a structural governance advantage that most ASX companies don't have.

The Lachlan McCann appointment

In a notable governance evolution, ARB appointed Lachlan McCann as CEO, sitting alongside Andrew Brown who remains Managing Director. This separation of the MD and CEO roles reflects a thoughtful transition — Andrew retains strategic and ownership-level oversight while McCann handles day-to-day operational leadership. McCann's remuneration is heavily tied to EPS growth through the LTI plan, directly aligning him with the long-term shareholder base.

50 years in 2025

The FY25 annual report celebrates ARB's 50th anniversary  from a family garage in 1975 to $730 million in revenue, operations in over 100 countries, 2,390 employees, and a market capitalisation that at its peak exceeded $4 billion. The 50th year also happened to be the year ARB made its most ambitious bet yet acquiring a 50% stake in ORW and gaining access to the 48-store 4WP retail network across the US.

Read More
#US Retail Sales Mixed
Last edited 2 weeks ago

The data for US retail during April looks mixed for ARB. While US retail sales have been growing for 3 months, motor vehicle sales have fallen. I don’t know what impact this will be having on ARB sales in the US, but probably negative. With gas prices doubling in the US since the war in Iran began, there could also be a swing from ICE vehicles to EVs as we have seen in Australia. This could be a tough half for ARB both here and in the US. Due to the high fuel prices likely to have a short term negative impact on ARB sales, I am sitting on the sidelines for now even though the share price looks tempting.

(Not held)

AFR report (Markets Live, 15/05/2026)

“US retail sales advanced for a third month in April, pointing to some signs of consumer resilience despite sharply higher gasoline prices.

The value of retail purchases increased 0.5 per cent last month after a revised 1.6 per cent gain in March, Commerce Department data showed. Because the figures aren’t adjusted for inflation, an increase could reflect higher prices rather than more sales volumes.

Nine out of 13 categories posted increases. Sales at sporting goods stores, online merchants and electronics outlets rose in April. Motor-vehicle sales fell. Receipts at gas stations rose 2.8 per cent as the Iran war pushed gas prices to the highest levels since 2022. Spending at grocery stores also rose firmly, likely reflecting a surge in food costs in the month.

The report suggests higher-than-usual tax refunds and a stock-market rally helped provide a financial cushion against mounting inflationary pressures. However, it’s unclear how long that will sustain robust demand. Inflation-adjusted wages are declining once again and Americans are saving less.

So-called control-group sales — which feed into the government’s calculation of goods spending for quarterly gross domestic product — increased a larger-than-expected 0.5 per cent. The measure excludes food services, auto dealers, building materials stores and gasoline stations. Outside of receipts at gas stations, sales rose 0.3 per cent, the least in three months.”

Read More
#Director Ownership
Added 2 weeks ago

4567a9b461791f153adc09a71994d7b9f63194.png

Market Cap $1.5B at $17.94 (15 May 2026)

Director Bio’s

Robert D Fraser — B.Ec., LLB (Hons). Independent Non-executive Chairman since 2022, Non-executive Director since 2004. Corporate advisor on capital markets, capital management and funding strategies. Non-executive Director of Omni Bridgeway Ltd (formerly IMF Bentham Ltd). Member of the Takeovers Panel. Member of the Audit & Risk and Remuneration & Nomination Committees.

Andrew H Brown — Managing Director. Wide range of experience in automotive engineering and marketing. Managing Director since 2012. Executive Director from 1987 to 2012.

Shona M Faber — B.Bus., GAICD. Independent Non-executive Director since 2022. Key executive roles leading commercial operations including manufacturing and sales.

Adrian R Fitzpatrick — B.Com., FCA. Independent Non-executive Director since 2016. Former partner of Pitcher Partners (retired 2016). Non-executive Chairman of Aussie Broadband Limited.

Karen L Phin — BA., LLB (Hons), GAICD. Independent Non-executive Director since 2019. Corporate advisor on capital markets. Previously Non-executive Deputy Chairman of Magellan Financial Group Limited until 2023, and Non-executive Director of Magellan Financial Group Limited until 2022. Non-executive Director of Omni Bridgeway Ltd. Member of the Audit & Risk and Remuneration & Nomination Committees.

Andrew P Stott — Independent Non-executive Director since 2006. Wide 4WD industry experience. Non-executive Director of AMCIL Limited.

Roger G Brown — B.E., M.B.A. Non-executive Director since 1987. Non-executive Chairman from 2016 to 2022. Executive Chairman from 1987 to 2016. Managing Director from 1987 to 2012. Chairman of the Remuneration & Nomination Committee. Company Director and corporate adviser. Chairman of Supply Network Limited, Non-executive Director of F.F.I. Holdings Limited and MFF Capital Investments Limited. President of the Muscular Dystrophy Association of NSW.

Worth noting he and Andrew Brown together hold approximately 4.95 million shares together between them they control roughly 6% of the company. Roger essentially built ARB from 1987 through to handing the Managing Director role to Andrew in 2012, so the Brown family's continued presence on the board is a meaningful signal of long-term owner-operator alignment.

Recent Buying History

Karen Phin

·      13 March 2026

Buying on market 3,000 at $21.80 per share ($65,400)

·      21 May 2025

Buying on market 2,000 at $30.06 per share ($60,120)

Andrew Scott

·      12 March 2026

Buying on market 3,000 at $22.50 per share ($67,500)

Roger Brown And Andrew Brown

·      11 & 12 March 2025

Buying on market 30,180 at $33.1310 per share ($999,893.58)

Shares are held in common through Rogand Pty Ltd.

Read More
Valuation of $25.72
Added 2 weeks ago

Intrinsic Value $25.72

Bull Case: Revenue Growth 11% Cagr FY 30 Net Margin 15% PE 30- 35 Probability 20%

Base Case: Revenue Growth 6% Cagr FY 30 Net Margin 13% PE 22- 28 Probability 50%

Bear Case: Revenue Growth 4% Cagr FY 30 Net Margin 11% PE 15-18 Probability 30%

Investment thesis: Dominant Australian 4x4 brand using US expansion via ORW/4WP as the next decade's growth engine.

Key assumption: The US is genuinely the make-or-break thesis. ARB's Australian market is mature (55% of revenue, growing ~0%), so the growth story is almost entirely export, and the US is the biggest prize by far: the American truck/4x4 aftermarket is roughly 10× the size of Australia's.

Biggest risk: AUD/THB stays historically weak, permanently compressing margins on Thai-manufactured product.

PE rationale: 22–28× base; deserves premium over industrials peers given no debt, high ROIC and long runway.

Net margin rationale: 13–14% normalised; currently depressed by AUD/THB — margins should recover as hedges roll at better rates.

What makes you buy: 2H FY26 margin recovery confirmed + ORW/4WP store-in-store rollout gaining scale + Aussie new vehicle cycle turning.

What makes you sell: ORW losses persist into FY27, management guides margin miss again, or AUD/THB structural deterioration

Not held.

Read More
Valuation of $24.50
Added 2 weeks ago

What is in the current price: Currently pricing in low growth and compressed margins. With base case using a 4% revenue CAGR under a higher for longer inflation rate, compressed net margins 12.5% and 18x exit PE returns a discounted PV, including dividends, of $17.80. 10% discount rate.

6213701eee50846b9576fdd7b0508cbb272e92.png

Revenue History:

6f4e9036383666b2ccf472f6736a5ad8c4f121.png

Profit and Margins:59d66e5b725d5b71e4fca4cba39403ae9a8f19.png

H1 FY26 indicating US margins approximating AU levels of profitability.

Thesis: US Growth and US Margins. Contributing a small proportion of overall revenue but H1 FY26 returning higher margins and suggesting the implied FY26 could be the best yet. Management commentary on FY25 annual report and the H1 FY26 report stated consistent month-on-month sales growth.  Suggesting a greater proportion of ARB products sold through the stores (independent of ORW sales needing to grow).

ORW/ARB History: The strategic funding of ORW USA Inc. allowed them to acquire the 4 Wheel parts business for $30M (42 retail stores) in Q2 FY25. ORW rationalised the store numbers to 48 (total combined number of stores). Has this been missed or interpreted as challenges? Noting, the ORW sales do not flow through to ARB's earnings (treated as an equity holding) but the store footprint seems to be benefiting ARB sales and margins.

ARB holding 50% in ORW seems to be allowing ARB to drive ARB sales growth in the ORW stores.

Sales Ex-AU

1506d6842f64595429326aa238db9d165de81a.png


Profit and margins Ex-AU

bd54bdbdaacd9be86ccbac07a804ac073a7bb1.png

How much is in the USA story?

The H1 result was circa 30% PCP growth, and management commentary has not changed on month-on-month increase in sales. 

Quick and dirty US only contribution (excludes dividends):

8c8160bbbeb21afbdb972730870f80ced69c95.png

Noting 24% CAGR (if maintained) would likely attract greater multiples but this growth within the combined entity is diluted due to relative size. Giving a good opportunity to keep an eye on this to see if the thesis is playing out.

Quick and dirty- rest of the business (Excluding dividends):

5f762d62d30fe12526872c4bc81933fa8388fa.png


Combined including dividends: Highlights some interesting asymmetry.

1983f58600ced496b11fcff67bc73c3692e93e.png


Valuation: Taking the base case for the core business and overlaying a bullish tilt on US sales I land on a fair value between $22.60 and $26.

Disc. Recent purchase IRL. 1.5%

Read More
#Results
stale
Last edited 9 months ago

ARB putting up a decent result in a challenging environment. Decent sales growth with a bit of a hit to NPAT.

Challenges include, the Aussie dollar trading at an all time low against the Thai Baht (where a lot of the products are made), Tariffs against imports to the US, difficulty attracting and retaining skilled labor in Aus and around a 15-20% reduction in new car sales across the key models to ARB.

On the positive side, export markets have all seen growth, a lot of the Aussie stores are seeing refits and investments as well as the HQ, investments into an online portal and digital marketing. The big one is the US strategy seems to be paying off, having reached profitability milestones early despite a fairly challenging economic and political environment.

I'm encouraged by the fact they're still seeing sales growth in a challenging environment, and they're taking the time and spending the money to shore up the foundations. If they can do that in a challenging environment I'm keen to see what they can do if/when they can get on a roll with new car sales and a more favourable consumer spending environment in Australia (if there is one thing that aussies love more than seeing equity grow in their property, it's stripping that equity out to buy a caravan and do up the 4x4).

As always time will tell but I feel they're positioning themselves well for the future, just need to wait for it to arrive now.

-Held irl and on SM

3d923974fdf33c6f4c64384db0a114d535666a.png

Read More
Valuation of $41.75
stale
Added 9 months ago

Latest updates are at the bottom - this lot starts in 2019:


Missed expectations in FY18 with 64.3 cps of EPS, but still growth. They keep growing and raising their dividend every year, paying an additional big special dividend about every 5 years. One of the best quality companies on the ASX. Always look expensive, but they probably always will.

. . . . . . .

Update: 17-Mar-2020: Those 5 year special dividends used to look pretty good, and we're overdue for one now, but ARB are not spitting off the same amount of profits that they once were - well, they are, but it's off higher revenue, so their costs are also higher. Basically, while their ROE and profit margins are still OK, they have reduced from where they used to be - and they may be putting more money back into the business now - rather than distributing it all to shareholders. They are now a truly global business, with manufacturing facilities in Australia and Thailand - and they sell their products all over the globe.

Something to keep in mind when you look at reducing car sales in Australia is that (1) they are selling globally, not just in Australia, and (2) 4WD sales as a percentage of overall car sales keeps increasing, so more and more people are buying SUVs and larger 4WD vehicles - rather than traditional sedans, so ARB's market is in the only part of the overall vehicle market that is still growing.

That said, not everyone will customise or accessorise their 4WD or SUV. Some are quite happy with the standard models straight off the showroom floors. However, the serious 4WDers do spend significant money on their vehicles, and ARB are at the quality end of the market, and can charge accordingly.

They won't be completely immune from the COVID-19 impact, but they will get through this better than many other businesses. For instance, not everyone will want to stay home, and one of the safest holidays people can take, is away from everybody else in a four wheel drive, camping, fishing, whatever.

Great businesses, plenty of insider ownership, their MD (Andrew Brown) and Board Chairman (Roger Brown) are both brothers of ARB's founder, Anthony (Tony) Ronald Brown (hence the ARB name - his initials) and Andrew and Roger together own almost 6 million ARB shares (7.45% of the company), worth over $90 million.

They always maintain a rock solid balance sheet (avoiding debt, and paying it down very quickly whenever they do use debt) and they look after their shareholders, as well as their staff and customers, who seem to all really like the company.

Additionally, the ARB share price has dropped 25% in the past few weeks - as have many other companies too of course - but this is another clear example of a company that has NOT become worth 25% less during that time, and therefore represents an opportunity to pick up shares in a quality company at lower prices. ARB usually trades at a healthy premium, because it is a high quality company, so these opportunities are worth taking advantage of in my opinion.

Update: 16-Sep-2020: Quality rises to the top! Raised valuation/TP to $27.70. They are close to fair value up here - I am holding, but not buying more.

Update: 17-Mar-2021: Nice chart! New PT = $42.77. Still holding ARB in two of my portfolios, including my SMSF. Also on my Strawman.com Scorecard. Excellent Management! Do not bet against them!

Premium products that sell at premium prices, and their customers are prepared to pay for quality and reputation. Selling globally to retail (4WD owners) and to OEMs (original equipment manufacturers, i.e. car and truck manufacturers and retailers).

ARB work closely with OEMs to ensure that their products work seamlessly with the vehicles they are designed for, so - for instance - the bull bars don't overload the front suspension or change the centre of gravity too much (do not affect the steering or tyre wear), and work with the airbags and other safety systems, and are designed so they do not interfere with the engine cooling, the headlights, indicators, or the number plate position, etc.

Often the bull bars incorporate an extra set of indicators, lights, and/or a new number plate position, but these are always designed with input and feedback from the OEMs, who have to be happy with the end product. Many OEMs fit ARB bull bars and other 4WD accessories as standard kit on certain models.

Despite all of that, sales to OEMs is just part of ARB's business. Most of their revenue still comes from selling a huge range of 4WD accessories directly to end users - the owners of 4WDs, who like to customise their vehicles to their own specifications.

17-Sep-2021: Update: Raising my PT (not valuation) to $48, which is basically where they closed today. They are a top quality company, with excellent management who have plenty of skin in the game themselves and think like shareholders (because that's what they are), however I wouldn't be buying them up here, and certainly not above $50 at this point, although that may look like a cheap level in another 5 years time. They just keep on kicking goals.

I hold ARB in my Strawman portfolio and in 2 of my real life portfolios also, one of which is my SMSF. They are a buy and hold position in all three portfolios. Happy to take the volatility but also happy in the knowledge that their management will keep adding value over time and keep growing revenue and profits, and that the share price will therefore keep rising over time.

They have a decent quality premium baked in already at these levels, but they arguably deserve that premium. Covid-19 hasn't hurt them at all. It's probably helped them if anything. However people who think they've been major Covid-19-beneficiaries and therefore their revenue and profits have been unusually inflated and are due to decrease as the global situation returns to some sort of new normal are probably not giving their management enough credit.

ARB are the initials of the founder of the company, Anthony (Tony) Robert Brown, and today it is his two brothers, Andrew Brown (MD) and Roger Brown (ARB's Chairman) who are the A & R Brown who run ARB, and they run it VERY well. I am very happy to back them to navigate through whatever comes their way going forwards, just as they do when they go 4-wheel-driving or rally-car racing on the weekend.

They know the industry, and they know their own competitive advantages within the industry. They are simply the best at what they do, and people who are serious about 4WDing and 4WD accessories are prepared to pay a premium for the best gear and the best service from people who know their stuff.

In summary, one of the best quality companies on the ASX, certainly one of the best management teams, and there's a fair bit of that priced in already, but that's OK. A hold, but possibly not a buy up here. I hold.

P.S. When I first started adding content here about ARB they were known to pay large special dividends around once every 5 years, but that seems to no longer be the case. The last big one was $1/share in 2014 when their SP was $12 to $13/share, so based on that 5 year cycle, their next big special div was due around 2019/2020, but guess what happened in early 2020? Due to uncertainty around Covid-19 in Feb/March 2020, ARB decided not to pay an interim dividend, but they almost doubled their final dividend (39.5 cps vs 21 cps the previous year) and in 2021 they've declared dividends worth 68 cents/share, so their dividends continue to rise, but they may not pay any more of those really big special dividends going forwards. I think it all depends on what their options are at the time.

If there are no clear opportunities to reinvest their profits back into the business for high rates of return I am confident that they will always return excess funds to their shareholders as they always have done, however I would prefer them to reinvest in the business and pay ordinary dividends as they have been doing in recent years, which has resulted in excellent growth, both in terms of the business fundamentals and the share price.

Update: 28-Oct-2022: I'm no less bullish on ARB, however I think that my previous price target of $48/share is probably too high for the mid-term, as ARB got a big Covid-boost at the start of covid-19, which resulted in a share price spike at that time, however sales are now returning to more moderate growth, similar to pre-Covid.

In that light, while I still consider ARB to be one of the highest quality companies on the ASX, with one of the best management teams, and I still own shares, I am lowering my price target to $37/share for a 3 year price target, so by late October 2025. They're still growing, still increasing revenue, profits, and dividends, and they're a global company with plenty more room to grow yet, so I'm happy to maintain exposure to ARB.

76e3ea6cd6bc2ee092677394c6b4ae38a5b2ae.png

8501bf123e5c433b36b37a655315b4366fec52.png

b007b18b5d182e6e5ec790cd41cc0a05c5eaca.png

62a4ba11448884e54ab05e1090d892c2012605.png


13-April-2024: Update: I still hold ARB in my largest real money portfolio and here, however I sold them out of my SMSF at $39.76/share in late Feb (2024) along with another very high quality company that I've held for years and like a lot, but that also looked fully priced, Monadelphous Group (MND), which I sold for $13.77/share. With those funds I added NEU (Neuren Pharmaceuticals) to my super (@ $20.36) & topped up my GMD (Genesis Minerals) position (@ $1.62), I then sold two of my gold miners in early March, so RMS and RRL were sold out of my super and replaced with DVP (Develop Global) @ $2.30 and I topped up my S32 (South32) shares at $2.99. Six weeks later S32 is higher at $3.29 (was $3.34 on Thursday), DVP is lower at $2.22, NEU is $20.76, GMD has shot up to $1.985, and MND is a little higher at $13.86. ARB is now $39.64, so around what I sold them for, but they've been as high as $41.83 over recent weeks, which, as I said, looks fully priced to me, as good as they are, and they are very good.

I still hold ARB in a larger real money portfolio, but they are not one of the 10 largest positions in that portfolio because they don't look like they have as much near term and mid term upside compared with some of the other positions.

Nothing has changed in my mind with ARB except the price. There is a quality premium or a management premium in the price, and that makes sense, but it also means that they look reasonably fully priced up around $40/share, so the upside is limited at these prices. They will still grow, no issue with that, they are not ex-growth or anything like that, they are a very high quality company and they are currently priced accordingly.

So ARB remains a company that I will always buy on decent dips in the absence of better alternative opportunities, and I'm happy to maintain a core ARB holding in my largest portfolio as well.

06-Feb-2025: Update:

I've been out of ARB for a little while, because they got up above $40 and then exceeded my price target, so looked fully valued to me. I jumped back on them this week because they dropped back below $40 and I thought $36 to $38 was a reasonable area to start accumulating ARB again, considering they were reasonably bullish in their outlook statement in October at their 2024 AGM, and they have become a tier 1 supplier to Toyota North America now which should result in an increase in OEM sales.

As I said over in my gold forum thread, I sold Westgold (WGX) out of my super earlier in the week, and because I was already overweight gold producers in my Super portfolio, I decided to rotate that money plus a bit more into a new ARB Corporation (ARB) position.

I've always liked ARB as a company, however I had exited them on valuation grounds last year - not because I didn't think they could go higher, I just saw more immediate likelihood of shorter term upside elsewhere at the time.

I think they are likely to report well this month for H1 of FY2025. When reading the following outlook statements, remember that ARB have very conservative management who tend to underpromise and overdeliver.

745024379dfce551fd42d0ddc117352234de16.png

One headwind they have had is a welding labour shortage at Kylsyth, which they said at their AGM continues to be a constraint, however to help mitigate that skilled labour shortage here in Australia, they have expatriated 14 factory employees from ARB Thailand to Kilsyth. So, in that light, the skilled labour shortage here in Australia may not be such a major headwind.

My other concern had been about declining ROE, however I think that is likely to stabilise soonish.

06f74cac0ad0acbee83900b125aa66220ee414.png

Note their share count has been quite stable for a decade, because they tend NOT to use their shares to pay for acquisitions, they instead use cash and debt and then pay off the debt quickly; they never have much debt and are often in a net cash position.

Their book value has also increased every single year, which is another sign of a well managed company.

That info above is from Commsec, the slide above that and the one below this paragraph are both from ARB's 17th Oct 2024 AGM Presentation.

bd93cfa7b210b1690b7fd93828f466098d9096.png

ARB are releasing their H1 results on 18 February, so in less than 2 weeks, so we'll get a better feel then for how they are travelling. I am expecting further progress overseas, especially in North America, and I'm excited that they are now working on an online channel as well which should boost their sales even further.

They have never been the cheapest option, both for what they sell, and when buying their shares, but they have intentionally positioned themselves at the quality end, and they have a lot of brand loyalty across their customers and clients. People are still prepared to pay more for higher quality gear, especially serious 4WD enthusiasts.

In terms of management quality, they haven't done anything to make me question their management. The gradual decline in their ROE is worth watching, however having double digit ROE (above 15% ROE) is still good for a consumer discretionary company that mostly sells aftermarket vehicle accessories in a competitive market.

They have always found new ways to grow without taking on excessive risk, and I think with companies like this, it pays to buy on pullbacks even when they still look expensive, because as long as management keep delivering they are unlikely to ever look cheap. They can just occasionally look a little cheaper than they were a month or two ago, as they do today (6-Feb-2025), possibly on tariff concerns. Whatever, I'll take it.

Disclosure: Holding, both here and in my SMSF.

No change to my price target today - I'll review it after I read their report on the 18th.


19th August 2025: Update

Post-FY2025-Full-Year-Results:

As expected, ARB have shrugged off any US tariff impacts, basically ignoring tariffs in their commentary and posting another solid set of numbers and declaring a special dividend in addition to matching last year's final dividend.

ARB-Letter-to-Shareholders-FY2025.PDF

Full Year Investor Presentation FY2025.PDF

d83ae20f71ee5c4040f649838908fb46908644.jpeg

088a75009716d33d9bf3369f82206983277619.png

While NPAT was a little down on the pcp, revenue was up, and they've got zero debt, a big pile of cash, and they've decalred a special dividend once again - it's been a few years since they've done that - at one point they were doing it about once every 5 years, but the last special div was $1/share actually back in 2014, prior to they'd paid large special dividends in 2009, 2004 and 2001 (see here for deets).

What's more important is that their main metrics are still on a growth path.

255a3303112bab50244868daa4675963b2985d.jpeg

In terms of revenue and earnings (NPAT), Covid was very good to ARB, as we can see with those FY21 and FY22 columns above. When 4WD owners weren't allowed to socialise or go to work in many cases, they were more than happy to kit out their vehicles with even more gear and make good use of it.

We've seen a revision to lower growth rates since then, but ARB is still growing revenue and still investing in further growth, as explained in their ARB-Letter-to-Shareholders-FY2025.PDF today.

In terms of their sales breakdown, the Australian Aftermarket segment, their largest division, was slightly down due to lower vehicle sales (4WD and Ute owners buying less new vehicles so less demand for aftermarket gear), however OEM sales were up a smidge and Exports grew strongly (+16.4%), as shown below:

ea09baec86790f8f01b332af5d6a3275cf4b16.jpeg

All in all, another good year for ARB, and I believe that my assertion back in April and May that ARB was being oversold on tariff fears was on the money, based on their recovery since then and today's SP rise on these results:

72810be44716724273b5d030f6c9bea0115372.png

I'm holding ARB in my SMSF & they are currently the largest position in my SMSF, but I'll likely trim that position after these two upcoming ex-div dates (22-Aug for the 50 cent special div & 02-Sept for the regular 35 cent div) if the SP holds up, and I'll then keep them as a smaller position, because part of my investment thesis has already played out, which is the share price recovery from the recent sub-$30/share level a few months ago. They are a great longer term position for a Super fund, however I tend to load up on such positions when they are oversold - which doesn't happen very often with very high quality companies like ARB, and then trim the positions when they approach fair value or exceed what I consider to be fair value.

I also hold ARB here as a decent position on my SM scorecard.

The thing is, that I don't have unlimited investment capital, so I tend to rotate it into companies that I consider to have the best near-to-mid-term upside at any given time, up to a point, like I'm not buying and selling every day. Not EVERY day. But some weeks get busier than others.

For now, I'll leave my price target for ARB @ $41.75, however I expect to be raising that either next year or the year after when their US expansion and their move into the UAE gains further traction.

The reason they are a long term super fund position for me is that they are a high quality company with superb management who act like owners because they own $190m worth of shares (Roger and Andrew Brown own 4,936,208 ARB shares, which is 6.04% of this $3 Billion plus company), and they keep making excellent capital allocation decisions, including returning capital to shareholders when they have a high cash balance (and no debt - they never have debt) and their cash is surplus to their requirements, as demonstrated by their prior history of special dividends and the one they've announced today, who manufacture and provide high quality gear that they are able to sell at premium prices to loyal customers who are not as sensitive to price increases because they are not buying ARB gear based on price but on quality.

Addtionally they have a large growth runway outside of their home country of Australia, and the switch to SUV and 4WD vehicles continues, with around one third of all new vehicles sold now being 4WD or SUV vehicles, and even higher in some countries.

ARB also have an excellent history of innovation and new product development (NPD) which has allowed them to remain market leaders at the quality end of 4WD accessories for both OEMs and aftermarket.

Lots to like. Ticks all the boxes for me. That's why I hold.

Read More
#Results
stale
Added 6 years ago

18-Feb-2020:  Half Yearly Report and Accounts

No surprises.  Revenue around 7% up, NPAT around 7% down (partly due to the significant strengthening of the Thai baht which has caused an increase in the company’s costs on a range of products manufactured in ARB’s Thai factories), NTA slightly up (+3.3%), interim dividend maintained (@ 18.5 cps).  I hold ARB.  Very high quality management team with significant insider ownership.  Good long term hold.

Read More
#Business Update
stale
Added 6 years ago

30-Mar-2020:  Earnings Guidance and Deferral of Interim Dividend Payment

Regarding the dividend, they are not only deferring the payment until October (as a number of other companies already have) but ARB are also deferring the record date as well:

Interim dividend payment 
 
ARB is in a strong financial position with no net debt and is additionally supported with its immediately available bank facility. 
 
Notwithstanding the Company’s strong financial position and due to the uncertainty around when trading conditions will improve, the Board has prudently decided to defer payment of the interim fully franked dividend of 18.5 cents per share which was due to be paid on 17 April 2020 to 23 October 2020.  The record date has also been deferred from 3 April 2020 to 9 October 2020.

The Company is undertaking a number of other operational measures to protect its financial position whilst trading through the current challenging economic environment. The Board believes that ARB will be very well positioned to take advantage of the opportunities that are expected to arise when conditions improve.  

--- click on link above for more ---

Excerpt:

Earnings guidance 
 
The Board of ARB Corporation Limited (“ARB” or the “Company”) has decided to withdraw its earnings guidance provided on 18 February 2020 for the financial year ending 30 June 2020.   
 
Whilst trading during January, February and the first half of March 2020 was in line with the Company’s earnings guidance, it is not possible to reliably forecast where the current financial year will end due to the increasing levels of economic uncertainty as a result of Covid-19. 
 
The escalation of government protection levels and the enforcement of various levels of shutdown and business closures in Australia, Thailand, the United States, New Zealand, Europe and the Middle East are progressively slowing economies across our global business operations. 
 
ARB provides essential services to many critical industries around the world including emergency vehicle services, communication networks, aid agencies, government law and order, energy providers and health organisations.  The Company is working closely with its employees, customers and suppliers to manage disruptions to the business and ensure continuity when market conditions improve. 
 
ARB is focused on the health and safety of its staff and customers and has put in place appropriate measures to protect their well-being whilst ensuring the continuity of services to customers. 

--- click on link above for more ---

Read More
#ASX Announcement 12/1/21
stale
Added 5 years ago

MARKET UPDATE

The Company advises that it achieved unaudited sales revenue of $284 million for the half year ended 31 December 2020 which represents growth of 21.6% compared with the prior corresponding period. Based on preliminary, unaudited management accounts, the Company’s profit before tax for the first half is within the range of $70 million to $72 million, inclusive of $9.8 million of non-recurring government benefits.

WE have lots of friends who have been doing up their 4x4s over the lockdown and are all happy campers now that they have been let out!

DISC: sorry I sold on news of lockdowns

View Attachment

Read More
#Business Update
stale
Added 5 years ago

12-Jan-2021:  Another positive business/market update from ARB today

MARKET UPDATE

The Board of ARB Corporation Limited (ARB) is pleased to provide an update to the market for the half year ended 31 December 2020. This announcement follows the Company’s previous update released to Australian Securities Exchange on 7 October 2020 and the Chairman’s Outlook Statement presented at the Company’s Annual General Meeting on 15 October 2020.

The Company advises that it achieved unaudited sales revenue of $284 million for the half year ended 31 December 2020 which represents growth of 21.6% compared with the prior corresponding period. Based on preliminary, unaudited management accounts, the Company’s profit before tax for the first half is within the range of $70 million to $72 million, inclusive of $9.8 million of non-recurring government benefits.

ARB expects to release its results for the half year ended 31 December 2020 on Tuesday, 16 February 2021.

The Company maintains a positive short-term outlook based on a strong customer order book and another record sales month in December 2020. However, the Company’s first half performance should not be used as an indicator for the second half of the financial year, for which no guidance can be provided, as it remains far too uncertain to predict in the current economic climate.

The Board expresses its appreciation to and recognises the commitment and efforts of ARB’s staff around the world.

--- ends ---

[I hold ARB shares.  Great company.  Excellent Management who are conservative and never overpromise and underdeliver (they do the opposite regularly).  Plenty of insider ownership, hence positive alignment with ordinary shareholders.  Superb track record of total shareholder returns.  Excellent company culture.  This is as close to a "buy and hold" company as I can find, along with CSL.  Neither ARB or CSL look cheap, or even good value at current prices, but both will be trading significantly higher in 5 years and 10 years time (IMO) so they are both very solid "Holds" (IMO), and I do hold both, having bought back into CSL yesterday on a small pullback.]

Read More
#Insider buying
stale
Last edited one year ago

I topped up on ARB through the week. Apparently some insiders did too, to the tune of about a million dollars. My addition was somewhat more modest, but always nice to have insider alignment.

Appendix-3Y-x-2.PDF

Read More
#2022 AGM Presentation
stale
Added 4 years ago

28-Oct-2022: ARB Corporation 2022 AGM Presentation

See Also: ARB Corporation 2022 Annual Report

Like many companies at the moment, ARB have been sold down on their AGM Presentation today, finishing the day down $1 (or -3.57%) at $26.98. That's a fair way below their $50+/share highs during the second half of last year. Their share price has almost halved since then.

0c6d5391e8ab837e44edda63a7a3052f635112.png

As usual, ARB's management have given conservative guidance, with continued growth forecast, albeit more weighted to the second half. I'm a holder of ARB shares, both IRL and here on SM, and they're one of the highest quality companies on the ASX in my opinion, with some of the best management also. The company's share price does tend to trend well, as that graph shows, so I'm planning to top up my positions once they eventually stop falling and then establish another uptrend.

4194188fb2e45fe6638576c067fa3d6660aa1d.png

ed1c327918c3fe7e9bde0c88336e0d9cef2191.png

5d37b47ab9fd26c9af01ee3d57a7aa439c4cd3.png

79ae5fe7b819fe03393f7c674a20f6dbf9a1b6.png

62dcc471476f89ac803bd352dbaba2e7e4e9ca.png

70271d93290e65ea9155490ad318f841b22a93.png

Read More
#Full Year Investor Presentatio
stale
Added 3 years ago

Forecast Ex Div Date: 06/10/2023 (45 days away)

Not a good Report, Could consider.

Gross Profit Margin: i cannot find this.

5e3aa0c133e2e59fafeeceb6c50585ba647431.png

ebdd42bce2399761273b1d1a0a64b3f0059796.png

c6e8b4c0eda750cf1883162a788c4a1ce16d07.png


ARB is well managed by the Browns

No Debt so guessing a short blip in the charts.

Return (inc div)   1yr: -7.32%   3yr: 8.97% pa   5yr: 8.97% pa

fa9307a72730d40d6653719766c35170227af8.png

Read More
#Tariff sell off opportunity?
stale
Last edited 12 months ago

Monday 9th June 2025: I believe ARB Corporation has been sold off MOSTLY because of tariff concerns, because they manufacture their own products such as bull bars (a.k.a. "roo bars" here in Oz), canopies, roll bars, cargo barriers, spotlights, etc. in Melbourne, Australia and in Thailand; they also source product from China, especially for the US market which is their main growth driver currently, growth that has been accelerated by their acquisitions in late 2024 of the US-based Off-Road Warehouse (ORW) and 4 Wheel Parts (4WP) chains of stores. ARB are expanding those store networks into new states in the US as well as opening new stores in states in which they already operate.

c069051ac21d61c35b773a15cd545377e8702e.png

Source: Page 16 of ARB's H1 of FY2025 Results Presentation: https://www.arb.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/FY2025-HALF-YEAR-INVESTOR-PRESENTATION.pdf

As you can see there (above), they have only just scratched the surface in terms of that expansion; it's still in its early stages.

If you only looked at ARB in terms of their Australian store network, you could view them as a mature company, but Australia, while being their home ground, is not where their main growth is coming from these days.

Yet, despite being a quality company that is profitable and growing, with good management who have skin in the game (6.04% of ARB's SOI are owned by Andrew and Roger Brown, the brothers who run the company, a share that is currently worth $158 million), ARB has been sold down significantly in 2025:

679e77156897e141bcac3193b4035eca3e609e.png

The selling actually started back in early October, so they've been in a strong downtrending channel for 8 months now. From $48 to $27 (-$21 or -44%) and they're still towards the bottom of that range - at around $31 to $32/share.

While it started 8 months ago, the ARB sell-down did however accelerate when Trump started throwing large tariff numbers around. To give you an idea of how brokers are viewing those tariff risks to ARB, here are some excerpts from FNArena.com today:

First, an overview of the calls (Recommendations) and Target Prices of the brokers that FNArena follow closely:

8df766b85c84b1abf49ce598aca2c0dbc4dadf.png

And here are the most recent updates from those brokers as summarised by FNArena - I have highlighted tarrif commentary in orange:

961fdd314c42290f02ea831787822eb8904fd4.png

b6bcefe0ae7444281c19a3b8e2ae905f64ff3f.png

7bde4f44bc046ab71f2516bf58fe8e5c67d354.png

The following updates were back in February after ARB's H1 results were released and FNArena suggest that Macquarie, Morgans, and Morgan Stanley have not sent out any client notes or updates on ARB since then:

49a9e191f9bfc4131035d9a253d218780c6ad5.png

093ca3fd6f919fb77da3134ea91f2220275e2f.png

And below are the calls and target prices from the two "Other" brokers that FNArena cover less closely:

6534b5599104be5c829977680231982489003d.png

They have omitted Goldman Sachs who are listed below as having a "Neutral" call on ARB and a $38 Target Price on Feb 20th.

cdf8cfa387c5e0f8430ab5067eb504afdc3726.png

e28c93108cd8f514853e341ca289f468744793.png

Wilsons (whose Feb update summary is highlighted in the green rectangle above) are the most bullish on ARB, however there are no updates listed from Wilsons since Feb 19th.

For those who may be interested, here's Commsec's breakdown of the "Subs" for ARB as at 25th July 2024:

f0dbd0e89e9eadbfcf76db0b7720b92d3937ec.png

Since then, we have seen AFIC (AFI, one of Australia's oldest LICs) enter the register on 14th March 2025 with 5.03% of ARB and we have seen some buying and selling from 4 of those other names above. Below are the latest moves from them:

  • Bennelong sold down from 12.57% to 11.50% on 22nd October;
  • MUFJ and First Sentier (First Sentier is regarded as a controlled subsidiary of MUFJ so it's the same position) bought and sold heaps (they have a history of loaning shares to shorters) and ended up with 6.08% of ARB on 23rd May 2025 (being their latest update); and
  • State Street (one of the world's largest ETF providers) moved from 5.02% up to 6.07% on Feb 2nd.

Also, to be clear, Rogand Pty Ltd is ROGer and ANDrew Brown's private investment vehicle in which they hold their ARB shares. Both are directors of ARB and Andrew is ARB's MD. Their brother Anthony Ronald "Tony" Brown founded the company back in 1975 with ARB being his initials, however it is now run by Andrew and Roger Brown (So the ARB acronym could now stand for them instead of their brother Tony).

Below are some of the more important (IMO) metrics that I follow regarding ARB:

9fe1356bbd51d3349c643ad7983aa3526fca46.png

50166bbfafa06d6280c19376d619cb5ab72e09.png

Source: https://fnarena.com/index.php/analysis-data/consensus-forecasts/stock-analysis/?code=ARB

They're not the best company on the ASX, but they're easily in my top 20 in terms of quality management and quality products, and they do have a moat, which is a superb industry reputation and loyal repeat customers.

Additionally they have another moat (competitive advantage) through their early involvement with OEMs (Original Equipment Manufacturers, in this case Utility Vehicles ["Ute"] and 4WD manufacturers) where ARB often design bull bars and other accessories for these vehicles either during the vehicle design stage or shortly after the vehicle design has been finalised, with the full cooperation of the OEMs, so not only is their gear recommended by the OEMs, it is often purchased by the OEMs to be fitted on certain models as either included or optional accessories when those vehicles are first sold.

Anyway, this straw isn't supposed to be a bull case for ARB, as I've done that already. This one is just to suggest that while the quality and management premiums look to have either partially or fully come out of the share price of ARB now, there is also the murky outlook around tariffs weighing on sentiment around this company.

And if you think that the US and China trade war is just beginning and is going to get a LOT worse and likely drag the whole world in - in terms of being a negative on global growth - then that probably makes sense.

If, on the other hand, you think that Trump Always Chickens Out (TACO) and the tariffs are either going to eventually settle at around 10% across the board, perhaps higher for China, or get scrapped altogether, then these levels may present a good entry point for companies like ARB who have clearly been caught up in the negative sentiment associated with the tariff impacts.

As has been commented on here many times, quality companies will likely trade at a decent premium most of the time, so when they do get sold down substantially on what looks like a temporary issue rather than a structural one, it can be a great time to build a position - or increase one.

Disclosure: I hold ARB shares, both here and in my SMSF.

Read More
Valuation of $14.00
stale
Added 6 years ago
I really respect management and think the company will continue to grow above system growth for a while yet. That being said, I dont expect much more than ~5% EPS growth, on average, over the coming 5 years. Am also mindful that they are rather exposed to new car sales and discretionary spending -- not to mention FX risk (as latest half shows). As such, assuming around 70c in full year EPS, i find it hard to go above a PE of 20, which is a valuation of $14. At that price, shares yield about 2.8%.
Read More