People Corp. (TSXV:PEO): A Recession-Resilient Stock to Own

The bear market gives a good entry point to buy People Corp. (TSXV:PEO), which has a long growth runway.

edit Colleagues chat over ketchup chips

Image credit: Photo by CIRA/.CA.

People Corp. (TSXV:PEO) stock has corrected about 30% from its February high. It has simply retreated to its long-term normal cash flow multiple of about 22.4. As long as the company continues to execute as it has, now is a good entry point for the small-cap stock.

People Corp: The business

People Corp. is a leading provider of creative group benefits, group retirement, and human resource consulting services. Specifically, it delivers employee group benefits consulting, third-party benefits administration services, group retirement services, health solutions and human resource consulting services to help companies recruit, retain and reward employees.

The company has more than 1,000 employees with 40 offices across 10 provinces in Canada. It has about $2.2 billion in premiums, $8.5 billion in pension assets under administration, and serves about 15,000 organizations across a wide range of industries.

People Corp.’s profitability

People Corp. has increased its revenue and EBITDA every year since 2009. The company’s three-year revenue growth rate was close to 27%, while its operating income increased at a rate of 34% per year in the period. In comparison, its EBITDA (a cash flow proxy) climbed 24% per year.

Its fiscal 2019 revenue rose 24.5% against 2018 and included organic revenue growth of 8.9%. Its adjusted EBITDA climbed 31%.

In 2019, People Corp.’s revenue was $162.5 million and adjusted EBITDA was $36.1 million.

People Corp. has yet to turn a consistent profit in terms of net income as it continues to expand its business with targeted acquisitions.

People Corp.’s balance sheet

At the end of fiscal 2019, People Corp. had cash and cash equivalents of $12.5 million. Its debt-to-equity-ratio has improved to 1.52 from 2.34 against three years ago. As well, its debt-to-asset ratio has improved to 0.60 from 0.70.

As of the last reported quarter, People Corp. had long-term debt of $83.1 million versus cash and cash equivalents of $22.7 million.

People Corp.’s growth potential

People Corp. grows organically and synergistically by making strategic acquisitions. Since 2012, it has made about 19 acquisitions and the stock was a nearly 20-bagger!

The company’s total enterprise value is only about $556 million, while it estimates the group benefits industry has a market of more than $40 billion, so there’s lots of room to grow both organically and via acquisitions.

Additionally, the company sees benefit costs increasing by about 5% per year. Its business is therefore resilient to recessions. It’s a good business to own in a market downturn and will grow when the economy is booming.

The Foolish bottom line

As a company that offers consulting, benefit, and human resource solutions across Canada, small-cap People Corp. has lots of room to grow. The market crash has dragged down the stock to an attractive valuation for the double-digit growth potential it offers.

People Corp. has a decent balance sheet with reasonable debt ratios. Coupled with a recession-resilient business, the company can withstand the current economic downturn.

Moreover, the company has a track record of growing both its revenue and cash flow — a trend that will likely continue in the long run. An investment today in People Corp. stock can lead to annualized returns of about 20% per year over the next five years.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Fool contributor Kay Ng has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends People.

More on Investing

rail train
Stocks for Beginners

CP Stock: 1 Key Catalyst Investors Should Watch

After a positive surprise in the last quarter, CP stock (TSX:CP) recently made a change that should have investors excited…

Read more »

Payday ringed on a calendar
Dividend Stocks

Cash Kings: 3 TSX Stocks That Pay Monthly

These stocks are rewarding shareholders with regular monthly dividends and high yields, making them compelling investments for monthly cash.

Read more »

grow dividends
Tech Stocks

Celestica Stock Is up 62% in 2024 Alone, and an Earnings Pop Could Bring Even More

Celestica (TSX:CLS) stock is up an incredible 280% in the last year. But more could be coming when the stock…

Read more »

Airport and plane
Stocks for Beginners

Is Air Canada Stock a Good Buy in April 2024?

Despite rallying by over 20% in the last six months, Air Canada stock could be a great buy for the…

Read more »

Businessman holding AI cloud
Tech Stocks

Stealth AI: 1 Unexpected Stock to Win With Artificial Intelligence

Thomson Reuters (TSX:TRI) stock isn't widely-known for its generative AI prowess, but don't count it out quite yet.

Read more »

Shopping and e-commerce
Tech Stocks

Missed Out on Nvidia? My Best AI Stock to Buy and Hold

Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) stock isn't the only wonderful growth stock to hold for the next 10 years and beyond.

Read more »

Human Hand Placing A Coin On Increasing Coin Stacks In Front Of House
Dividend Stocks

Up 13%, Killam REIT Looks Like It Has More Room to Run

Killam REIT (TSX:KMP.UN) has seen shares climb 13% since market bottom, but come down recently after 2023 earnings.

Read more »

crypto, chart, stocks
Energy Stocks

If You Had Invested $10,000 in Enbridge Stock in 2018, This Is How Much You Would Have Today

Enbridge's big dividend yield isn't free money. Here's why.

Read more »