CyrusOne Hits All-Time High As Data Center Stocks Advance

By | March 23, 2016

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CyrusOne ( CONE ) stock hit an all-time high on the heels of Tuesday’s investor day, where the data center operator outlined goals to double the company’s revenue by 2020. Cloud computing and corporate outsourcing of IT infrastructure has increased demand for data center space. Data center operators — including DuPont Fabros Technology ( DFT ), Digital Realty Trust ( DLR ) and CoreSite Realty ( COR ) — are among the top performers in IBD’s Finance-Property REIT group. It’s ranked No. 46 out of 197 industry groups that IBD tracks. Many data center operators are real estate investment trusts. Apple ( AAPL ), Microsoft ( MSFT ), Facebook ( FB ) and Salesforce.com ( CRM ) are among tech companies expanding data centers. Data center operators provide space, power and cooling. Customers pack the warehouse-sized data centers with their own computer servers and other gear. The data center market has been divided among wholesale providers — such as Digital Realty   and DuPont Fabros — and retail operators such as Equinix ( EQIX ), though some lines are blurring. CyrusOne stock was up a fraction in midday trading in the stock market today , above 42, but earlier rose nearly 5% to 43.42, its record high. Shares have gained nearly 13% in 2016. At its investor day event, CyrusOne said that it aims to double its enterprise value from around $4 billion to $8 billion by 2020, said Colby Synesael, an analyst at Cowen & Co., in a research report. “The company plans to achieve this goal by doubling its revenue, EBITDA and normalized FFO from 2016 to 2020 while being prudent to maintain (debt) leverage at 4.5 times or less, so that it can achieve an investment grade credit rating over that period,” added Synesael. REITs use a cash flow metric called funds from operations, or FFO. DuPont Fabros stock has shot up more than 25% this year, while CoreSite has gained about 20%. Digital Realty is up 15%. Equinix, part of IBD’s Internet-Infrastructure Solutions group, has gained 5%. Capital spending has been rising at data center operators. DuPont Fabros, aiming to raise $275 million, announced a stock offering on March 17. “New leasing volume suggests that demand remains robust and should support DFT’s growth plans with low leverage,” said Barclays analyst Ross Smotrich in a report. “However, the trade-off is that DFT had made it abundantly clear at their November 2015 investor day that their growth strategy would not include new equity. When future capital needs arise, therefore, investors may anticipate an equity raise.” Image provided by Shutterstock . Scalper1 News

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