
Iron Mountain (IRM) has attracted fresh attention after a strong run in the stock, with the share price at US$126.12 and total return figures that stand out over the past year and multi year periods.
For context, the stock is up over the past month and past 3 months, and its year to date and 1 year total returns are also positive. That kind of momentum often prompts investors to ask whether the current valuation still aligns with the company’s fundamentals and income profile.
See our latest analysis for Iron Mountain.
Recent trading has been choppy, with the share price down 4.5% over the past week but still showing a 12.7% 30 day share price return and a 51.5% year to date share price return, alongside a 266.25% five year total shareholder return that points to powerful long term compounding.
If strong long term returns at Iron Mountain have you rethinking your watchlist, it may be a good moment to widen the search using a screener focused on 20 top founder-led companies
With the stock near US$126, solid recent returns and an estimated 22% intrinsic discount on some models, the key question for you is simple: is there still a buying opportunity here, or is the market already pricing in future growth?
Iron Mountain’s most followed narrative, according to user niteco, points to a fair value of $160 per share versus the last close at $126.12, suggesting the market price trails that narrative assessment.
Iron Mountain is deeply embedded in industries that cannot afford data loss, compliance failures, or audit gaps. Healthcare systems, banks, insurers, and government agencies require secure storage, retention management, and disaster recovery solutions. This regulatory dependence supports recurring demand and low customer churn.
Want to see what justifies that higher fair value? The narrative leans heavily on recurring, regulation driven demand and a shift toward higher value digital and data center revenue. Curious how those assumptions translate into the valuation model and future cash flow profile?
Result: Fair Value of $160 (UNDERVALUED)
Have a read of the narrative in full and understand what's behind the forecasts.
However, this narrative could be challenged if growth in higher value digital and data center revenue underwhelms, or if compliance driven customers begin trimming information management spending.
Find out about the key risks to this Iron Mountain narrative.
The narrative and DCF style work both point to upside, but the P/E ratio paints a very different picture. At 137.8x earnings, Iron Mountain trades at a much higher level than the US Specialized REITs industry on 29.8x, the peer average on 20.8x, and even the fair ratio estimate of 45.5x that the market could move toward. That kind of gap suggests investors are paying a high price for each dollar of earnings, which raises the question of how much execution risk you are comfortable taking on.
See what the numbers say about this price — find out in our valuation breakdown.
With mixed signals across valuation models and earnings multiples, it is worth checking the data for yourself and deciding how comfortable you are with the trade off between risks and potential rewards, starting with 3 key rewards and 4 important warning signs
If Iron Mountain has sharpened your focus, do not stop here; give yourself a real edge by lining up a few more high conviction candidates using targeted stock ideas.
This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.
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