Return to Virginia Business - March 2003

EPA ruling treats Trex

Virginia Business
March 2003


Precious few stocks have tripled in value in the past 16 months. But thanks, in part, to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, that’s what has happened to shares of Winchester-based Trex Co., the nation’s largest manufacturer of alternative decking products.

“Alternative” is the key word in that company description. Trex produces deck planks that are made from composite wood and recycled plastic. Until last year, Trex decking was viewed as a novel alternative to pressure-treated lumber, the material commonly used to build residential decks.

An EPA move was good news for Trex investors. In February 2002, the EPA announced it would ban residential uses of wood with chromated copper arsenate (CCA) by 2004. CCA is an arsenic-laden pesticide used in 90 percent of all pressure-treated wood.

That announcement pushed Trex shares from the low teens to nearly $39 by last December; the stock is now about $32 per share. It also helped put Trex back on the steep revenue growth curve it had been riding since its managers bought the company from Mobil Corp. in 1996. That year the company’s sales were $23.7 million. Four years later, they had grown five-fold to $117.6 million.

Income in the third quarter of 2002 nearly doubled from a year earlier to $6.1 million, says company president Robert Matheny. The company hasn’t released its year-end results yet.

The company has also weathered a precipitous rise and fall of its stock. The price peaked at nearly $59 in mid-2000 and then fell to the low teens when the company couldn’t meet demand. Since then Trex, which also has a plant in Nevada, has added two new production lines to its existing 15 lines. “We have learned a lot over the past two years about maintaining this balance,” Matheny says.

by Karl Rhodes

Virginia Business - March 2003