Fastenal Stock Sold Off on Q1 Earnings. Don’t Buy the Dip.

It’s been 45 days since the bombing started in Iran. The Strait of Hormuz remains closed. Oil prices are falling on the hope that the U.S. blockade of the Strait will prompt renewed permanent peace talks between the U.S. and Iran. More importantly, more than six weeks of war have done little to dampen the…


Fastenal Stock Sold Off on Q1 Earnings. Don’t Buy the Dip.

It’s been 45 days since the bombing started in Iran. The Strait of Hormuz remains closed. Oil prices are falling on the hope that the U.S. blockade of the Strait will prompt renewed permanent peace talks between the U.S. and Iran.

More importantly, more than six weeks of war have done little to dampen the spirits of bullish investors. The S&P 500 closed yesterday’s trading at 6,886.24, up a little over 1%. The index is now in positive territory relative to its closing price the day before the war began.

With oil prices back below $100, investors are likely to step up their buying on Tuesday. S&P 500 futures were up slightly pre-market.

I’m not an expert on the oil and gas business (not even close), but something tells me we haven’t seen the last of $100+ oil prices, which means you might tread carefully until ships are moving through the Strait in significant numbers.

Monday’s bearish price surprises saw Fastenal (FAST) stock lose nearly 7% after reporting Q1 2026 results. Its standard deviation of -3.07 was the fifth-worst.

Meanwhile, the Barchart Technical Opinion says FAST is a 40% near-term buy. However, its valuation suggests it’s maxed out its gains in 2026.

The stock looks spent. If you’ve profited from its move in 2026, it might be time to take profits. Here’s why.

The S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats Index added the industrial and construction supplies wholesaler in January 2024 — an index constituent that has increased its annual dividend payment for 25 or more consecutive years — after it met the minimum criteria by raising its February 2024 payment by 2.6%.

It has subsequently raised its dividend three times; the latest increase of 9.1% saw the February 2026 payment rise to $0.24 a share from $0.22. The annual rate of $0.96 yields a reasonable 2.1%, nearly double the index average.

It’s been a darling of income investors for some time. The stock’s total return over the past 15 years is 13.36%. While that looks good, it’s about the same as the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) at 13.65%.

Risk-adjusted, it probably hasn’t fully delivered for shareholders.

Despite yesterday’s setback, Fastenal’s stock is up over 14% in 2026. The main explanation for this would be healthy sales growth in recent quarters.

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