Emerson Electric Co. (EMR) Positioned Strongly Among Heavy Equipment and Industrial Machinery Stocks

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We recently compiled the 7 Best Heavy Equipment and Industrial Machinery Stocks to Buy. In this article, we are going to take a look at Emerson Electric Co. (NYSE:EMR) against the other equipment and industrial machinery stocks.

Heavy equipment and industrial machinery stocks aren’t for those investors who are fans of sharp growth. These stocks belong to stable and sizeable firms that enjoy economies of scale because of their operations. Setting up manufacturing plants to make these machines is not an easy task, and firms that succeed in the endeavor can end up becoming industry leaders.

These stocks are differentiated by their products. Industrial equipment stocks can be of firms that sell farm equipment, construction machines, power generation equipment, and ships. While semiconductor fabrication machines are typically not thought to be industrial equipment, they are used at an industrial scale to churn out thousands of chips in a month to power our computers and phones. In fact, this sector is one of the few that actually has a stock that has a monopoly in its market. Its shares are up by 54% over the past twelve months and it is also Europe’s most valuable company. It ranked 10th on our list of 11 Best Semiconductor Stocks To Invest In for the AI Boom, so you can check it out by clicking on the link.

One way in which investors can decide which heavy equipment and industrial machinery stocks to invest in is by looking at their products. For instance, stocks that sell agricultural machinery are likely to fluctuate if investors believe that the broader agricultural industry is headed for a downturn. This has also been the case in 2024, as February marked a key data release from the Agriculture Department. According to this data, net farm income in the US is projected to fall to $156 billion in 2023 to mark a 16% drop from 2022’s record high of $185.5 billion. This trend will continue in 2024, to mark an additional, and stronger, 25.5% annual drop to $116 billion.

The report’s impact on agricultural stocks was immediate, with one of the biggest pure play farming equipment providers in the US with a market capitalization of $7 billion tanking by nearly 13% over the next two weeks. This stock is down by 22% year to date and 28% over the past twelve months, and its $1.6 billion in receivables and $3.4 billion in inventory could help it weather out the cyclical agricultural that’s widely believed to be in play for the rest of 2024. There’s an “economic stare-down” between farmers and buyers going on right now, as farmers are waiting for grain prices to recover from three year lows to sell their products.

This turmoil was also evident in the Creighton University Rural Mainstreet Index (RMI) reading for June 2024. High interest rates, weak prices, and low farming equipment sales made the index drop to 41.7 in June from 44.2 in May, for its tenth straight month of a reading that sits below the growth neutral figure of 50. Farm equipment loans are also up by 20% annually, as farmers rely on debt to fund their operations. The souring expectations are also present in the June reading of Purdue/CME Group Ag Economy Barometer. Its Farm Capital Investment Index component fell by three points to 32 in June – just a point shy of the all time low reading as farmers paused their plans for spending.

Shifting gears, the next major components of heavy equipment and industrial machinery stocks are those that make construction machinery. US construction spending fell by 0.1% in May to $2.1 trillion but marked a 6.4% annual growth. The drop was across the board, with private construction, residential construction, and single family construction dipping by 0.3%, 0.2%, and 0.7%, respectively. While the drop in residential spending could have come on the back of an 18.5% jump in housing inventory in May 2024 to 1.28 million at a time when the median home price was at a historic high of $419,300, commercial construction has been struggling due to high rates and rising work from home trends in America.

This slump is evident in regions such as Boston, where authorities have stressed on the need to sharply raise the tax rate ceiling for commercial properties or face a $400 million cut in spending.  As of January 2024, US commercial property prices have tanked by 11% since March 2022 when the Fed started to hike interest rates. This goes against the observations made during previous hiking cycles, according to data from the International Monetary Fund. Any turmoil in this segment means that heavy industrial machinery stocks will also face headwinds since construction spending is unlikely to pick up unless builders are certain of a shift in the economic environment. Commercial real estate loans have smaller maturity timelines, and 30% of this debt is due for maturity from 2024 to 2026.

With the current interest rates, refinancing will be costly, and it could constrain capital spending in the sector. This sector has also faced consistent net operating income (NOI) drops since 2020, which further reduces incentives for investment and spending. However, the eCommerce boom which opens up demand for warehouses and growth in residential NOI should power the industry moving forward. Additionally, infrastructure spending through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Act and the Inflation Reduction Act has earmarked trillions of dollars to upgrade America’s existing infrastructure and focus on electrification, which will naturally stimulate the demand for the construction industry even though it is struggling right now.

Looking at these trends, it’s unsurprising that the construction and farm component of the S&P flagship index has trimmed down its year to date returns to 11% from a peak of 24% in April. The drop started in April when the consumer price index (CPI) jumped by 3.5% annually in March, to outpace analyst estimates of 3.4% and mark a six month high. The benchmark S&P index has returned 17.5% year to date to lead the construction and farm equipment stocks by more than seven percentage points.

Our Methodology

To compile our list of the best heavy equipment and industrial machinery stocks, we ranked the 40 most valuable farming, heavy, construction, and specialty industrial machinery stocks by the number of hedge funds that had held a stake in them as of Q1 2024 end.

Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple. Our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 275% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 150 percentage points (see the details here).

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Engineers analyzing a complex network of process control software and systems.

Emerson Electric Co. (NYSE:EMR)

Number of Hedge Fund Investors In Q1 2024: 53

Emerson Electric Co. (NYSE:EMR) makes and sells a wide variety of industrial products such as valves, regulators, sensors, and switches, lending it a diverse business. Additionally, Emerson Electric Co. (NYSE:EMR) is a global company with a presence in China, Europe, North America, and other regions. This allows it to hedge its business performance against an economic downturn in one region, such as the Chinese industrial slowdown that has persisted since the coronavirus pandemic. At the same time, since its exposure to the struggling construction and farming stocks is limited, Emerson Electric Co. (NYSE:EMR) has benefited from a shift towards automation and upward revision of utility spending in the US.

At the same time, its acquisition of process optimization firm AspenTech has allowed Emerson Electric Co. (NYSE:EMR) to grow its revenue even though industrial spending has been muted. Management expects to deliver an additional $100 million in revenue in 2024 through synergies. Additionally, its diversified business has enabled it to hedge the downturn in industrial and automation spending by focusing on the growth in energy spending, life sciences growth in Africa, and a broader uptick in metals and mining.

Emerson Electric Co. (NYSE:EMR)’s management shared details of order visibility in the third quarter and the important process optimization business during the second quarter earnings call. Here is what they said:

Look we’re off to a good start in Q3. April over April of last year is up double digit 10% on orders. Certainly – and the three months has turned positive as well. So we flipped that to the low single digits on a three-month basis trailing three-month basis. So feel good about the start, feel good about the funnel and the conversion and the markets. And it’s again, driven by the process and hybrid environment across most of the world areas. Discrete we’re watching very carefully. As we said, we expect that to turn now a quarter later than originally expected. But we’re seeing green shoots that started developing in March and into April, particularly in Western Europe, in Germany around machine makers and some of the discrete industries.

So optimistic start for the quarter again gave us the confidence as we tested our businesses and worked out process that exiting the year in that mid-single digit low single-digit type of range on orders is very, very feasible.

Overall EMR ranks 3rd on our list of the equipment and industrial machinery stocks to buy. You can visit 7 Best Heavy Equipment and Industrial Machinery Stocks to Buy to see the other equipment and machinery stocks that are on hedge funds’ radar. While we acknowledge the potential of EMR as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and doing so within a shorter timeframe. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than EMR that trades at less than 5 times its earnings, check out our report about the cheapest AI stock.

 

READ NEXT: Analyst Sees a New $25 Billion “Opportunity” for NVIDIA and 10 Best of Breed Stocks to Buy For The Third Quarter of 2024 According to Bank of America.

 

Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.