Air Products is an industrial-gas infrastructure franchise: it embeds oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, helium and syngas supply into customer plants through on-site assets, pipeline density and merchant logistics that are difficult to replace once built. The business quality is real, but the stock at $280.21 as of the 18 June 2026 close is about 2% above the selected fair value of $275.63, so the investment case is not cheap quality; it is proof that the maintained FY2026 adjusted EPS guide can become distributable post-capex cash after the Q1 cash shortfall. The key macro issue is not energy inflation in isolation, but whether APD's project returns clear a higher cost of capital: if the roughly $4.0 billion capex wave supports guided earnings and releases post-capex cash, the reset can hold; if funding costs, helium weakness or softer merchant demand keep cash conversion thin, the multiple is paying for proof that has not arrived.
Latest Proof Snapshot
The report is built around fiscal Q1 2026, period ended 31 December 2025 and reported 30 January 2026. Sales were $3.1025 billion, up 6% year over year, with flat volumes because higher on-sites were offset by lower helium demand and a large prior-year helium sale. Reported operating income was $734.5 million, the Q1 operating margin on the reported income statement was 23.7%, and reported diluted EPS was $3.04; adjusted operating income was $756.5 million, adjusted operating margin was 24.4%, and adjusted EPS was $3.16. Adjusted operating income adds back business and asset actions; adjusted EPS also adds back non-service pension cost. Management maintained FY2026 adjusted EPS guidance of $12.85-$13.15, guided Q2 FY2026 adjusted EPS to $2.95-$3.10, and continued to expect FY2026 capital expenditures of about $4.0 billion.