Toronto Star

Revenue and appeal up for Vaughan-based firm

GREEN FOR LIFE ENVIRONMEN­TAL

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It’s a good year to be in the garbage business. Vaughan-based GFL, North America’s fourth-largest environmen­tal services company, saw its revenue go up 27.4 per cent year-over-year in the first quarter of 2022.

According to Scotiabank, the relaxation of COVID-19 restrictio­ns in Canada will likely have an outsized impact on the environmen­tal services sector, which took a hit during COVID-19 with offices and other buildings shut down for months on end. The firm’s stock price has gone down in the past year, from more than $32 (Canadian) to more than $28, after a high of more than $41 in October 2021.

A Scotiabank analyst report from May 5 noted that the company has exceeded expectatio­ns almost every quarter since it went public in March 2020. The bank is targeting a $46 share price.

“We continue to view GFL’s valuation as a relative outlier, with the company, in our opinion, likely to compound industry leading growth,” the Scotiabank report states, adding that GFL has an opportunit­y “to capture incrementa­l pricing surcharges.”

GFL’s rise over the past decade has been impressive. In 2011, when it secured a waste collection contract in one Toronto district, it was a fraction of the waste management giant it is today. In the first quarter of 2022 alone, GFL completed nine acquisitio­ns. BMO analyst Devin Dodge saw “encouragin­g signs” in GFL’s latest earnings, according to a May report.

“These trends should be supportive for attractive earnings growth through the balance of the year and into 2023,” he wrote, rating the stock to outperform.

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