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Frontier Capital Cuts Eagle Materials Stake by $88 Million Amid Housing Market Struggles
On February 17, 2026, Frontier Capital Management reported selling 398,334 shares of Eagle Materials (EXP 2.72%), an estimated $87.91 million trade based on quarterly average pricing.
What happened
According to a February 17, 2026, SEC filing, Frontier Capital Management sold 398,334 shares of Eagle Materials (EXP 2.72%) during the fourth quarter. The estimated value of this trade, based on the quarterly average price, was $87.91 million. The fund ended the quarter with 545,349 shares in the company, and the holding’s value decreased by $107.20 million, reflecting both trading and stock price changes.
What else to know
Company overview
Expand
NYSE: EXP
Eagle Materials
Today’s Change
(-2.72%) $-5.36
Current Price
$191.43
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$6.2B
Day’s Range
$188.81 - $193.35
52wk Range
$188.81 - $243.64
Volume
8.8K
Avg Vol
496K
Gross Margin
28.30%
Dividend Yield
0.51%
Company snapshot
Eagle Materials is a U.S. supplier of construction materials, leveraging an integrated production and distribution network to serve diverse building and infrastructure needs. The company controls key raw material sources such as limestone and gypsum, and serves commercial, residential, and public construction markets.
What this transaction means for investors
Frontier Capital cut its Eagle Materials position by about 42% in the last quarter, pulling $88 million off the table and making similar reductions throughout the portfolio. That’s a classic move for active managers who still like a company but want to take some chips off after a position gets too large or performance lags. Frontier runs concentrated small and mid-cap portfolios built through bottom-up research, so positions regularly get adjusted as fundamentals shift.
Eagle Materials makes cement and gypsum wallboard, and the divergence between the two is interesting. The cement business is doing well on infrastructure spending, but the wallboard business is hurting from slow housing activity. The stock dropped around 5% over the past year, lagging the S&P 500 by 18 percentage points, despite posting record revenue of $639 million in its most recent quarter.
Eagle Materials works for investors betting that housing eventually recovers while infrastructure spending stays strong. Cement tied to roads and bridges is thriving now. Wallboard tied to new homes is dependent on mortgage rates to drop before demand rebounds. If rates stay elevated longer, the wallboard weakness will likely persist. If housing turns, both businesses could fire together.