Barclays conducted a review of share repurchase capacity across its coverage universe and found several building-products and distributor companies with notable headroom for buybacks after weak year-to-date performance in the groups.
The bank noted that the building-products group has fallen 4% year-to-date, distributors are down 12% and homebuilders have dropped 3%, while the S&P 500 has gained 11% over the same period. Within that context, Barclays screened for firms whose available cash or net cash position - described as "dry powder" - represents a material share of market capitalization.
Names with significant buyback capacity
Among building-products companies, Barclays highlighted Skyline Champion (NYSE:SKY), Mohawk Industries (NYSE:MHK) and Trex Company (NYSE:TREX) as the most favorable results from its screen when considering dry powder as a percentage of market capitalization. For distributors, Site Centers (NYSE:SITC) and CNM were positive screens.
Skyline Champion was noted as holding a net cash position that supports approximately 29% of its market capitalization in dry powder, with the company maintaining steady buybacks through fiscal year 2028. Mohawk Industries was shown to have capacity to repurchase roughly 23% of its market cap. Trex Company could fund repurchases equal to about 11% of market capitalization, with Barclays observing the potential for larger buybacks in 2027 when a capacity investment is expected to be nearing completion.
Firms with constrained capacity
By contrast, Fortune Brands Innovations (NYSE:FBIN) and James Hardie Industries (NYSE:JHX) were singled out as having the most limited buyback capacity within the screen. Barclays explained that Fortune Brands' plan to reduce net debt leverage to below 2.5x from a current 3.1x is contingent on inventory reduction and operational improvements. In the case of James Hardie, the firm expects leverage to decline to 2.0x or lower by fiscal second quarter 2028 from 3.5x at the end of fiscal fourth quarter 2026 after completing its acquisition of AZEK.
Homebuilder findings and valuation caveats
Within homebuilders, KB Home (NYSE:KBH) screened positively driven by trading below book value, while D.R. Horton (NYSE:DHI) screened negatively because a reduction in book value per share offsets benefits. Barclays cautioned that buybacks executed by homebuilders at multiples well above book value limit the potential for value creation.
To illustrate the mechanics, Barclays modeled a hypothetical 10% market-cap buyback. Under that scenario, KB Home would experience an 8% change in its share price. D.R. Horton, however, would register a lower share price outcome in the hypothetical because a 14% decline in book value per share would offset a 280 basis point gain in return on equity.
Implications
- Barclays' screen identifies specific building-products and distributor stocks with meaningful repurchase capacity based on net cash or dry powder relative to market capitalization.
- Companies with elevated leverage or recent acquisitions show constrained ability to expand buybacks until balance-sheet metrics improve.
- Homebuilders face valuation considerations; repurchases at high multiples above book can reduce rather than enhance shareholder value.