Could this rebounding ASX small cap still have a long growth runway?

Woman handling a pile of hardware timber.

Small-cap investing is rarely smooth.

One month, the market is excited about scale, growth, and opportunity. The next, investors are worrying about dilution, capital raises, and whether management is moving too quickly.

That seems to be the current debate around Stealth Group Holdings Ltd (ASX: SGI).

The ASX small cap has had a wild few months. After reaching all-time highs in January 2026, Stealth shares are now down around 30% from that peak. Yet the share price has also rebounded more than 40% in May alone.

That kind of volatility can be uncomfortable. But it is also fairly stereotypical of smaller-listed companies, particularly those trying to grow quickly through acquisitions and operating leverage.

So, after the pullback and rebound, is Stealth still one of the more interesting ASX small caps to watch?

What does Stealth Group do?

Stealth is a diversified distribution company that supplies products and solutions to businesses, trade customers, and retail consumers across Australia.

It operates across two main divisions: hardware and industrial distribution, and consumer products.

That means the business sits in several practical end markets at once. It supplies hardware, safety, industrial, maintenance, repair, and operations products, while also distributing consumer products and technology accessories through retail channels.

Following its acquisition of Hardware and Building Traders (HBT), Stealth has become a much larger business. HBT added around 1,165 independent stores, approximately $700 million in annual member purchases, and roughly 490 supplier relationships.

The deal also helped position Stealth as a major independent alternative in the hardware and industrial supply market.

That is the strategic attraction here.

Stealth is not trying to reinvent the wheel. It is trying to build scale in fragmented markets, use that scale to improve procurement power, expand exclusive and private-label brands, and drive better margins across a larger platform.

The latest result showed real progress

Stealth’s half-year result was strong on the surface.

For the first half of FY26, the company reported gross sales of $82.2 million, up 11.8%. Revenue came in at $72 million, while operating earnings (EBITDA) rose 18.8% to $5.3 million.

Net profit after tax (NPAT) increased 51.4% to $1.6 million.

That is the kind of operating leverage investors like to see. A modest increase in revenue produced a much stronger jump in profit, suggesting the business is beginning to scale.

However, the per-share result tells a more complicated story.

Stealth issued a significant number of shares to help fund the HBT acquisition. That increased the share count materially, meaning existing shareholders absorbed dilution immediately, while the full earnings benefit of HBT will take longer to appear.

This is one of the central tensions in the investment case.

On the one hand, acquisitions can accelerate growth. On the other hand, they can dilute existing shareholders if the new earnings do not arrive quickly enough.

The balance of risk and reward

There are a few clear risks to watch.

The first is dilution. The recent notice of an extraordinary general meeting may have unsettled some investors, particularly the resolution seeking to refresh the company’s 15% placement capacity. That does not guarantee another capital raise, but it does remind shareholders that acquisitions and growth funding can come at a cost.

The second risk is execution. Integrating HBT, capturing synergies, expanding private-label brands, and improving margins all sound attractive. But each requires disciplined management.

The third is valuation. Even after falling from its highs, Stealth is no longer an overlooked microcap trading on sleepy expectations. Investors now expect growth.

Foolish Takeaway

Stealth is not a simple story anymore.

It has gone from a small distributor to a much more ambitious national platform with scale, procurement leverage, and a clear FY28 target.

The opportunity is obvious: If management delivers, Stealth could become a far larger and more profitable business.

The risk is equally clear: shareholders need the earnings growth to justify the dilution, the acquisitions, and the volatility.

That makes Stealth one to watch closely rather than blindly chase. For investors who can tolerate small-cap swings, this may be a company worth keeping on the radar as the HBT contribution becomes clearer over the next few reporting periods.

The post Could this rebounding ASX small cap still have a long growth runway? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

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Motley Fool contributor Leigh Gant has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.