Griffon Plunges 19.5% in Six Months: How to Play the Stock?

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Griffon Corporation GFF shares have dropped 19.5% in the past six months, wider than the industry and the S&P 500’s decline of 6.1% and 3.2%, respectively. The company’s performance is also notably weaker than its peers, 3M Company MMM and Carlisle Companies Incorporated CSL, which have gained 11.4% and lost 15.5%, respectively, over the same time frame.

GFF’s Six-Month Price Performance

Zacks Investment Research
Zacks Investment Research


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Closing at $67.20 in the last trading session, the stock is trading much below its 52-week high of $86.73 but higher than its 52-week low of $55.01. The building products and equipment manufacturer’s dismal performance can be largely attributed to the softness in the residential construction market, which is amplified by ongoing tariff-related concerns between the US and China.

Let us explore the reasons behind the company’s disappointing movement on the bourses and assess if there is potential for growth.

Factors Affecting Griffon’s Performance

Griffon has been witnessing persistent weakness in the Consumer and Professional Products (CPP) segment. Reduced consumer demand in North America and the United Kingdom has been weighing on the segment's performance. The CPP segment’s revenues declined 12.9% year over year in the second quarter of fiscal 2025 (ended March 2025). Demand for products like outdoor tools, project tools and outdoor decor and watering products has been particularly weak. Though the company anticipates a healthy demand environment in Australia, weakness in North America and the United Kingdom is expected to persist through fiscal 2025 (ending September 2025).

A typical seasonal drop in residential volumes also hurt the revenues of the Home and Building Products (HBP) segment, which declined 6% in the fiscal second quarter. Amid this, Griffon’s total revenues of $611.7 million missed the consensus estimate and decreased 9% on a year-over-year basis.

A high debt level remains another concern for GFF as it raises financial obligations and may drain profitability. The company’s long-term debt, net in the last five years (fiscal 2020-2024), increased 7.9% (CAGR). Griffon exited the fiscal second quarter with a long-term debt of $1.53 billion. Its current liabilities were at $330.8 million, higher than the cash equivalents of $127.8 million. Also, the stock looks more leveraged than the industry. Its long-term debt/capital ratio is currently pegged at 87.68%, higher than 54.02% of the industry.

Griffon operates in the highly competitive consumer, industrial, and home & building products markets. One of its peers, 3M Company, operates as a diversified technology firm and serves the aerospace, transportation, electronics, safety and industrial end markets.  Carlisle, another peer, engages in the manufacture of a wide range of roofing and waterproofing products, engineered products and finishing equipment.