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Industrials

The reflation rally continues. Despite our bearish outlook for the year, we think the risks of the current rally lie to the upside given China's redoubling of stimulus at the expense of reform. Populist troubles are picking up in Europe, but we maintain our positive structural view and note that the migration crisis is slackening. Rather, the greatest risks of populism continue to flourish in the Anglo-Saxon world with Brexit and Trump.

This week <i>Global Alpha Sector Strategy</i> in conjunction with <i>Emerging Markets Strategy</i> is sending out a <i>Special Report</i> on EM deep cyclical sectors, discussing debt and cash flow dynamics, identifying how far advanced the capital expenditure down cycle is, and determining if recent EM deep cyclical strength should be bought or faded.

There are a number of warning signs that the global and EM equity bounce is unsustainable. The latest episode of housing recovery in China will prove temporary due to still-large imbalances. Overweight Indian stocks: the credit cycle in India is less vulnerable compared to other EMs. However, the outlook for Indian equities in absolute terms is not bullish.

Airline stocks have enjoyed some modest relief in recent weeks, but we expect this resilience to fully reverse. The main issue is overcapacity. Discretionary spending is under pressure, based on the message from global manufacturing woes and the plunge in the National Association of Restaurants survey (second panel). Airlines have been aggressively building capacity, as evidenced by the increase in airline capital spending. Long airplane production cycles mean there is a lag between spending and when new capacity will come on stream, and the tripling in airline parts & components inventory in the last eight years warns that the delivery pipeline remains full. Airlines are already resorting to price cuts to fill seats (bottom panel), which will drag on profitability. Importantly, future capacity increases signal that deflation will remain a prominent industry theme for the foreseeable future, and act as a weight on valuation multiples. Stick with a high-conviction underweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: AAL, DAL, LUV, UAL. Airlines Are Running Out Of Fuel Airlines Are Running Out Of Fuel

The Fed's recent dovishness represents an acknowledgement of the feedback loop between Fed policy and financial conditions. Expect Fed hawkishness to ramp back up prior to the next rate hike, likely in June.

The Fed's recent dovishness represents an acknowledgement of the feedback loop between Fed policy and financial conditions. Expect Fed hawkishness to ramp back up prior to the next rate hike, likely in June.

The S&P rail index has bounced off its lows but continues to lack profit support to extend the recovery attempt. Total railcar shipments remain under pressure, which signals ongoing weak utilization rates and low odds of a reversal in selling price deflation. Coal markets are likely to stay under pressure as a consequence of high utility coal inventory levels, as electricity production was adversely impacted by an unseasonably warm North American winter. The latest retail sales report was also soft, and has sustained downward pressure on the retail sales-to-inventory ratio. That can be a decent leading indication for intermodal railcar shipments, the largest freight shipping category. Thus, despite attractive valuations and aggressive cost cutting efforts, we maintain a neutral weighting, preferring another industrials group to benefit from a slightly more reflationary tone in overall markets, please see the next Insight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: CSX, KSU, NSC, UNP. bca.uses_in_2016_03_16_001_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_03_16_001_c1

A Chinese reflationary cycle is unfolding. Capital spending is showing signs of regained vigor, driven by both housing and infrastructure. Chinese PPI deflation will ease further. This will help reduce balance sheet stress of materials producers and boost overall industrial profits. Remain positive on Chinese investable stocks.

Industrials stocks have been coming out of their funk lately, on the back of a selloff in the U.S. dollar, easing in financials stress, a tentative trough in the commodity hemorrhaging, and a relative calm in China and the emerging markets. We upgraded industrials to a benchmark allocation in mid-February as the brutal sell off in deep cyclicals was due for a breather courtesy of continued U.S. dollar weakness. We expect the relative share price ratio to be range bound in the coming months. The latest ISM manufacturing survey showed some glimmers of hope, but it remains below the 50 boom/bust line. The new orders survey sub-component ticked higher, however the mean reversion in industrials profit margins is well underway, and the path of least resistance remains lower (third panel). Bottom Line: While we are not calling for an imminent resurgence in global manufacturing or business investment, an easing in the U.S. dollar has the potential to cause a meaningful re-rating in overly depressed industrials profit expectations and relative valuations (not shown). We reiterate our recent upgrade to neutral. It No Longer Pays To Be Underweight Industrials It No Longer Pays To Be Underweight Industrials
The S&P electrical equipment & components (EEC) group has comparatively less resource exposure than many other industrial sub-industries. The EEC index is comprised of mature, diversified manufacturing businesses with exposure across a broad range of end markets. This provides stability in periods of macro volatility, but limits upside potential during the initial phase of an economic expansion. The group was savaged by the relentless advance in the U.S. dollar, creating deeply oversold and undervalued conditions. To be sure, electrical equipment sales have been pressured by the global manufacturing recession. However, new orders have stabilized. Shipments are far outstripping inventories, which are contracting, and unfilled orders have held steady. Importantly, our EEC productivity proxy has been very strong throughout the general manufacturing malaise. Productivity gains will help offset the loss of competitiveness from the strong U.S. dollar, and also suggests that earnings expectations are far too bearish. If the U.S. dollar begins to soften as a consequence of U.S. economic disappointment, than a valuation normalization is probable. Upgrade to overweight. This pulls up our overall industrial sector weighting to neutral. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: EMR, ETN, ROC, AME. bca.uses_in_2016_02_17_003_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_02_17_003_c1