SKS Technologies Hits Record High on Contract Win
SKS Technologies (ASX: SKS) hit a fresh record high on Friday, touching A$8.20 intraday before closing at A$8.04, up 6.5%. The move wasn’t driven by one announcement but two: a A$22 million Buildcorp contract for a major retailer’s new Melbourne Docklands headquarters and approval from Commonwealth Bank (ASX: CBA) for a further A$20 million in bank guarantee facilities. The combined message is hard to miss.
Management is preparing to bid for materially larger projects, and CBA agrees the company can handle them. With the stock up roughly 101% in 2026 and around 340% over 12 months, supported by an interim dividend that more than tripled at H1 FY26, the question is no longer whether SKS Technologies is a good business. It’s whether the price still leaves room to buy.
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Why the A$20m CBA Facility Increase Matters More Than the Contract Win
The Buildcorp contract is a solid win, but the bank facility increase tells the bigger story. CBA’s approval lifts the total bank guarantee facility to A$48 million, with combined facilities now at A$52 million. That’s a roughly 70% jump and the third major step-up in a short span. Total bank debt facilities have grown 6.5 times in less than four years.
Bank guarantees may sound like back-office plumbing, but for a contractor, they’re essential. Clients require them before awarding large projects, so bigger facilities mean SKS can credibly bid for bigger work. When CBA underwrites a step-up of this size, they’re effectively endorsing the pipeline. Management framed the facility as sized to support organic growth “over the next four years”, which points to a scale we haven’t seen from this company before.
The Data Centre Pipeline Is Doing the Heavy Lifting
The numbers behind that confidence are striking. The order book sits at A$355 million, with A$270 million extending into the second half of FY27, giving close to 18 months of revenue visibility. More importantly, the tender pipeline has surged from A$572 million in February to A$1.25 billion now, a 120% jump in three months. Data centre tenders alone account for more than A$1 billion, more than double February’s level.
In our view, SKS Technologies is no longer a generalist electrical contractor. It’s a leveraged play on Australia’s data centre and AI infrastructure buildout. Even a 30% conversion rate on the current pipeline would deliver material FY27 earnings upside.
The Investor’s Takeaway for SKS Technologies
Here’s the catch. At a market capitalisation of A$927 million and a trailing PE of 53, SKS Technologies is priced for excellent execution. The bull case is genuine, with Australian data centre capacity forecast to roughly double by 2030. But the risks deserve respect. Tenders aren’t contracts; larger projects often carry tighter margins, and the data centre concentration leaves SKS exposed if AI capex slows.
Our view: for new investors, we’d wait for a 10 to 15% pullback rather than chase the breakout. Existing holders should let winners run, but consider trimming if SKS Technologies exceeds 5% of the portfolio. The story is intact, but at record highs, patience is usually rewarded.
