Albany International (AIN) Stock Analysis & Winston Score
Albany International makes two very different things: special woven fabrics used inside paper-making machines, and lightweight composite parts for aircraft. The paper machine fabrics help factories turn wood pulp into paper and cardboard, while the aerospace parts — made from carbon fiber and similar materials — go into jet engines and airframes for customers like Boeing and Airbus. Despite being listed under "apparel manufacturers," Albany is really an industrial materials company with a long history in precision textiles. Albany earns money by selling these engineered products directly to paper mills and aerospace manufacturers around the world, with operations across North America, Europe, and Asia. Its paper machine clothing business has a strong competitive position because the fabrics are highly customized and switching suppliers is difficult for customers. The aerospace segment, called Albany Engineered Composites, is the main growth driver, but it carries real risk — revenue there depends heavily on production rates at a small number of large aircraft programs, making it vulnerable to delays or order cuts.
Winston Score: 19/100 — Weak
Weak fundamentals across most pillars.
- Quality: Mixed (9/30)
- Growth: Weak (1/20)
- Cash Flow: Weak (2/10)
- Stability: Mixed (3/10)
- Valuation: Data not available (0/10)
- Ownership: Weak (2/15)
Key Facts
Price: $74.54
Market Cap: $2.1B
Sector: Consumer Cyclical
Industry: Apparel - Manufacturers


