Ingersoll Rand (NYSE:IR – Get Free Report) and Gorman-Rupp (NYSE:GRC – Get Free Report) are both industrials companies, but which is the better investment? We will contrast the two businesses based on the strength of their analyst recommendations, valuation, earnings, profitability, dividends, risk and institutional ownership.
Analyst Ratings
This is a breakdown of recent ratings and target prices for Ingersoll Rand and Gorman-Rupp, as reported by MarketBeat.com.
| Sell Ratings | Hold Ratings | Buy Ratings | Strong Buy Ratings | Rating Score | |
| Ingersoll Rand | 0 | 7 | 4 | 0 | 2.36 |
| Gorman-Rupp | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 3.00 |
Ingersoll Rand currently has a consensus price target of $91.44, suggesting a potential upside of 13.41%. Given Ingersoll Rand’s higher probable upside, research analysts plainly believe Ingersoll Rand is more favorable than Gorman-Rupp.
Valuation & Earnings
| Gross Revenue | Price/Sales Ratio | Net Income | Earnings Per Share | Price/Earnings Ratio | |
| Ingersoll Rand | $7.24 billion | 4.40 | $838.60 million | $1.35 | 59.73 |
| Gorman-Rupp | $659.67 million | 1.94 | $40.12 million | $1.91 | 25.53 |
Ingersoll Rand has higher revenue and earnings than Gorman-Rupp. Gorman-Rupp is trading at a lower price-to-earnings ratio than Ingersoll Rand, indicating that it is currently the more affordable of the two stocks.
Dividends
Ingersoll Rand pays an annual dividend of $0.08 per share and has a dividend yield of 0.1%. Gorman-Rupp pays an annual dividend of $0.76 per share and has a dividend yield of 1.6%. Ingersoll Rand pays out 5.9% of its earnings in the form of a dividend. Gorman-Rupp pays out 39.8% of its earnings in the form of a dividend. Both companies have healthy payout ratios and should be able to cover their dividend payments with earnings for the next several years. Gorman-Rupp has increased its dividend for 52 consecutive years. Gorman-Rupp is clearly the better dividend stock, given its higher yield and longer track record of dividend growth.
Volatility & Risk
Ingersoll Rand has a beta of 1.33, suggesting that its stock price is 33% more volatile than the S&P 500. Comparatively, Gorman-Rupp has a beta of 1.29, suggesting that its stock price is 29% more volatile than the S&P 500.
Profitability
This table compares Ingersoll Rand and Gorman-Rupp’s net margins, return on equity and return on assets.
| Net Margins | Return on Equity | Return on Assets | |
| Ingersoll Rand | 7.31% | 12.14% | 6.88% |
| Gorman-Rupp | 7.41% | 13.49% | 6.10% |
Institutional and Insider Ownership
95.3% of Ingersoll Rand shares are owned by institutional investors. Comparatively, 59.3% of Gorman-Rupp shares are owned by institutional investors. 0.7% of Ingersoll Rand shares are owned by insiders. Comparatively, 11.3% of Gorman-Rupp shares are owned by insiders. Strong institutional ownership is an indication that large money managers, hedge funds and endowments believe a company is poised for long-term growth.
Summary
Ingersoll Rand beats Gorman-Rupp on 10 of the 17 factors compared between the two stocks.
About Ingersoll Rand
Ingersoll Rand Inc. provides various mission-critical air, gas, liquid, and solid flow creation technologies services and solutions worldwide. It operates through two segments, Industrial Technologies and Services, and Precision and Science Technologies. The Industrial Technologies and Services segment designs, manufactures, markets, and services air and gas compression, vacuum, and blower products; fluid transfer equipment and loading systems; and power tools and lifting equipment, including associated aftermarket parts, consumables, air treatment equipment, controls, other accessories, and services under the under the Ingersoll Rand, Gardner Denver, Nash, CompAir, Elmo Rietschle brands, etc. The Precision and Science Technologies segment designs, manufactures, and markets diaphragm, piston, water-powered, peristaltic, gear, vane, progressive cavity, and syringe pumps; and gas boosters, hydrogen compression systems, automated liquid handling systems, odorant injection systems, controls, software, and other related components and accessories for liquid and gas dosing, transfer, dispensing, compression, sampling, pressure management, and flow control in specialized or critical applications under the Air Dimensions, Albin, ARO, Dosatron, Haskel, Ingersoll Rand, LMI, Maximus, Milton Roy, MP, Oberdorfer, Seepex, Thomas, Welch, Williams, YZ, and Zinnser Analytic brand names. This segment's products are used in medical, life sciences, industrial manufacturing, water and wastewater, chemical processing, energy, food and beverage, agriculture, and other markets. It sells through an integrated network of direct sales representatives and independent distributors. The company was formerly known as Gardner Denver Holdings, Inc. and changed its name to Ingersoll Rand Inc. in March 2020. Ingersoll Rand Inc. was founded in 1859 and is headquartered in Davidson, North Carolina.
About Gorman-Rupp
The Gorman-Rupp Company designs, manufactures, and sells pumps and pump systems in the United States and internationally. The company’s products include self-priming centrifugal, standard centrifugal, magnetic drive centrifugal, axial and mixed flow, vertical turbine line shaft, submersible, high-pressure booster, rotary gear, diaphragm, bellows, and oscillating pumps. Its products are used in water, wastewater, construction, dewatering, industrial, petroleum, original equipment, agriculture, fire suppression, heating, ventilating and air conditioning, military, and other liquid-handling applications. The company markets its products through a network of distributors, manufacturers’ representatives, third-party distributor catalogs, direct sales, and e-commerce. The Gorman-Rupp Company was founded in 1933 and is headquartered in Mansfield, Ohio.
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