Comprehensive Analysis
As of 2026-06-12, Close $94.5. The market currently assigns Primoris a market cap of roughly $5.10B and an enterprise value of roughly $5.51B. Following severe downward momentum, the stock is trading in the lower third of its 52-week range of $70.68 to $205.50. The valuation metrics that matter most right now show a clear discount: the P/E (TTM) is 18.6x, the EV/EBITDA (TTM) is 10.9x, the Price-to-FCF (TTM) is roughly 15.0x, and the trailing FCF yield stands at an impressive 6.67%. While prior analysis confirms the company maintains a fortress balance sheet with low net debt, the recent margin collapse in Q1 heavily dictates today's depressed multiples.
Wall Street analysts remain broadly optimistic about a recovery, assigning 12-month price targets of Low $108.07 / Median $151.25 / High $197.40 based on a panel of 21 analysts. Using the median target, the Implied upside vs today's price is 60.1%. However, the Target dispersion is extremely wide (an $89.33 gap between high and low), signaling vast uncertainty. Analyst targets represent the "crowd's" expectations for future earnings growth and margin recovery, but retail investors must remember that these targets often lag significantly behind real-time execution issues. A wide dispersion like this typically occurs when a company suffers an abrupt operational setback (like Primoris's recent solar project delays), dividing analysts on whether the pain is temporary or structural.
If we look at what the business is fundamentally worth based on the cash it produces, we can use a DCF-lite method. The assumptions are: starting FCF (FY2025) of $340.5M, a conservative FCF growth (3-5 years) of 4.0% (penalized slightly for recent execution friction), a steady-state/terminal growth of 2.0%, and a required return/discount rate range of 8.0%–10.0% to reflect typical contractor risk. Capitalizing these flows implies a fair value range of FV = $82–$108. The logic is simple: if the company can simply sustain its historical cash generation and grow it at the pace of inflation, the business warrants roughly today's valuation. If growth completely stalls or execution risk demands a steeper discount rate, the intrinsic value caps out near the current price.
We can reality-check this using yield analysis, which is highly intuitive. The company's FCF yield (TTM) is currently 6.67% ($340.5M FCF divided by the $5.10B market cap). For cyclical infrastructure contractors, the market typically demands a required yield of 6.0%–8.0%. Dividing current cash flows by these required rates translates to an implied value of FV = $79–$105. Meanwhile, the dividend yield is a negligible 0.34% (based on an annual payout of $0.32), meaning "shareholder yield" is almost entirely realized through internal business reinvestment and debt pay-down rather than cash directly to your brokerage account. The FCF yield suggests the stock is currently trading right at the bottom edge of fair value to slightly cheap.
When we check if the stock is cheap compared to its own past, the discount becomes obvious. The current P/E is 18.6x (TTM). Over the last 3-5 years, the company typically traded in a historical band of 17.8x–24.5x. The current EV/EBITDA multiple is 10.9x (TTM). Trading below its own historical averages implies one of two things: either the market is presenting a value opportunity, or investors are actively pricing in structural business risk due to the sharp Q1 margin deterioration. Given that the balance sheet is deeply insulated, this historical discount leans more toward a temporary penalty than a permanent loss of franchise quality.
Relative to competitors, Primoris is drastically undervalued. If we look at premier specialty infrastructure peers like Quanta Services (PWR) and MasTec (MTZ), the peer median EV/EBITDA (TTM) is hovering in the 21.5x–32.4x range. Primoris trades at just 10.9x EV/EBITDA (TTM) [All peer multiples use TTM basis]. Even if we apply a massive discount to reflect Primoris's smaller scale and recent project execution hiccups—using a multiple of 12.0x–14.0x—the implied enterprise value would be $6.0B–$7.0B. Subtracting $405.2M in net debt leaves an equity value that translates to a price range of FV = $104–$123. A discount is justified due to lower gross margins, but the sheer size of the current ~50% multiple gap is overly punitive given Primoris's massive MSA backlog.
Bringing it all together, we have four distinct valuation ranges: Analyst consensus range ($108–$197), Intrinsic/DCF range ($82–$108), Yield-based range ($79–$105), and Multiples-based range ($104–$123). The DCF and Yield-based methods are the most trustworthy because they reflect cold, hard cash generation rather than optimistic analyst guesses or historically bloated peer multiples. Triangulating these points gives a Final FV range = $95–$115; Mid = $105. Comparing Price $94.5 vs FV Mid $105 → Upside/Downside = 11.1%. Therefore, the stock is deemed Undervalued. For retail entry zones: Buy Zone is below $85, Watch Zone is $85–$105, and Wait/Avoid Zone is above $105.
Sensitivity: If we apply ONE small shock to the model—changing the discount rate ±100 bps—the revised FV midpoints swing to $82 (at 10%) and $125 (at 8%). The most sensitive driver for this contractor is the discount rate attached to execution risk. Finally, the reality check: the stock recently plummeted from a 52-week high of $205.50 down to $94.5. At $205, the valuation was wildly stretched (trading at over 40x earnings). The violent -50% sell-off simply reflects valuation returning to intrinsic fundamentals after a hyped run-up, meaning today's price is finally grounded in reality.