NEW YORK, June 2, 2026, 06:04 EDT
Construction Partners Inc. traded almost unchanged in early Tuesday action, sitting at $114.73 according to Google Finance, after closing Monday at $114.74, down 1.49%. The road builder dropped Monday as traders considered higher oil-linked costs and a backlog that remains strong.
The timing is notable since there hasn’t been any new company release or SEC filing to move the story. The investor-relations page for Construction Partners still showed its most recent news was the May 8 fiscal Q2 report. The most recent 10-Q and 8-K filings were also dated May 8.
Market reaction has been mostly a read-through. Crude dropped more than 1% Tuesday after President Donald Trump told reporters that Iran talks were still underway, according to Reuters. The energy market is still volatile with continued Middle East supply fears. Asphalt and diesel prices remain a clear issue for road contractors.
Construction Partners makes and installs hot-mix asphalt, a surface built from stone and liquid asphalt. The company also sells aggregates and liquid asphalt. It says it is vertically integrated, with control over multiple parts of its supply chain, like asphalt plants, aggregate sites, and liquid asphalt terminals in eight Sunbelt states.
Bulls got some mileage out of the May results. Revenue was up 34.5% to $769.2 million in fiscal Q2, while adjusted EBITDA gained 34.6% to $93.3 million. Backlog, or projects signed but not yet done, hit a new high of $3.14 billion. CEO Fred J. “Jule” Smith III called it a “strong quarter” and pointed to the “peak construction season ahead” as he bumped fiscal 2026 guidance to $3.59 billion-$3.65 billion in revenue and $552 million-$564 million in adjusted EBITDA. Adjusted EBITDA is earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization, minus some line items. PR Newswire
Analysts raised their targets after the earnings report. Baird’s Andrew Wittmann kept his Outperform and increased his price target to $169 from $129 on May 11, per a market-data summary.
But the stock isn’t cheap. MarketBeat shows Construction Partners trading at a price-earnings ratio near 50, with a price-book above 7—both pointing to a premium valuation against profits and book value. The site’s consensus is listed as Moderate Buy: one strong buy, three buys, three holds.
The pressure wasn’t just on ROAD. Granite Construction, Sterling Infrastructure, and Primoris Services—other civil and infrastructure contractor names traders watch with ROAD—also traded lower in the latest finance quotes.
But the downside is spelled out. Construction Partners’ 10-Q said its costs depend on liquid asphalt, diesel fuel and natural gas, and long periods of higher petroleum prices could hit profit if the company can’t use price clauses, hedges, cost cuts or hikes to make up for it. The filing also flagged weather as a risk because outside work can slow or stop.
Shares are caught between a record backlog and raised guidance, but the market is looking again at what higher fuel and asphalt prices mean for margins. The big question now is if the company can keep making contracted work pay as summer construction ramps up.