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Machinery

The current profit backdrop for the machinery industry is grim, but the relative price ratio has already made a large downward adjustment and short interest is sky high. Importantly, machinery companies are finally addressing the need to reinvigorate productivity as an offset to the competitive drag from a strong exchange rate. Importantly, history underscores the likelihood of at least a temporary hiatus in the bear market. Going back to the 1950s, we have identified five durable machinery relative performance bear markets. On average, they lasted 42 months and recorded 44% in declines from peak to trough. In comparison, the current downturn has been underway since 2011, with the price ratio shedding 36%. Interestingly, a cycle-on-cycle analysis shows that machinery stocks have troughed prior to any turnaround in either the ISM index or the U.S. leading economic indicator. Instead, the group appears to have taken its cue from U.S. dollar weakness and a rally in commodity prices, both of which herald better times ahead for primary machinery end markets. Consequently, continued economic deterioration may not translate into additional relative underperformance. We upgraded to neutral in yesterday's Weekly Report, protecting a profit of 19%. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: CAT, ITW, DE, PCAR, CMI, SWK, IR, PH, SNA, DOV, PNR, XYL, FLS. bca.uses_in_2016_02_02_002_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_02_02_002_c1

The oversold bounce is not supported by policy or profits, and should be treated as countertrend. Lift machinery to neutral and differentiate between pharmaceuticals and the unwinding of the biotech mania.