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The first half of 2022 was lousy for most stocks, including shares in the industrial sector. But that pain can create opportunity.
Several industrial stocks look like big winners, based on what Wall Street thinks.
The
S&P 500
dropped 16.5% in the second quarter. The
Dow Jones Industrial Average
dropped 11.8%. It was the worst quarterly performance for those indexes since the first quarter of 2020, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
Industrial stocks didn’t do any better. The average industrial stock in the
Russell 1000 index
dropped roughly 15%. Inflation and rising interest rates had investors worried about recession, even though industrial demand continued to grow.
The ISM PMI Index—a key gauge of manufacturing activity—averaged about 55 in the second quarter. A level above 50 indicates growth. And ISM
PMI
chair Tim Fiore has characterized the industrial sector as a demand-led, supply-constrained industry for months.
With demand holding in, Wall Street sees opportunity in several stocks.
The best bets, based on analyst target prices are: logistics services providers
GXO Logistics
(ticker: GXO) and
XPO Logistics
(XPO);
Boeing
(BA) supplier
Spirit AeroSystems
(SPR); distributor
Builders FirstSource
(BLDR); taser maker
Axon Enterprise
(AXON); boat maker Brunswick (BC); and electrical distributor
WESCO International
(WCC).
Wall Street expects those stocks to rise an average of roughly 75% over the coming12 months, based on average analyst price targets.
Boeing
stock looks almost as attractive. The average analyst price target is about $216 a share, up 55% from recent levels.
Analysts price targets, of course, are just one way to screen for new ideas. And when markets become volatile—like they were in the second quarter—these targets can often lag behind actual stock prices, on the upside or downside.
Still, the seven plus Boeing all have strong analyst support.
The average Buy-rating ratio for stocks in the S&P 500 is about 58%, and each of the stocks has a ratio above that mark. The ratio is the number of Buy ratings compared with the total number of ratings.
Analysts ratings aren’t the be all and end all for investors, but they are one way to ensure investors aren’t looking at stocks that are cheap for some fundamental reason.
The seven stocks excluding Boeing also are trading at an average of 14.4 times estimated 2023 earnings. At the end of the first quarter, those stocks traded for more than 21 times estimated 2023 earnings.
What’s more, valuation multiples have come down even as earnings estimates have risen. Over the past three months, full-year 2022 earnings estimates for the seven are actually up about 5% on average.
Boeing trades for about 23 times estimated 2023 earnings, down from about 25 times estimated 2023 earnings at the end of March. Its estimate hasn’t gone in the same direction as the others.
Boeing estimates for 2022 have come down by about 86% over the past three months. Boeing laid an egg when it reported first quarter results in April, leading the estimate cuts. The Street still likes the stock, but Boeing had a more troubled first half of the year than the other industrial stocks.
A screen is never a substitute for a full investment thesis. And potential upside based on analysts’ numbers is just a starting point for investors searching for bargains.
Inflation remains a big concern, but things should get better eventually. They usually do, especially for stocks that are cheap enough.
Write to Al Root at [email protected]
Source: https://www.barrons.com/articles/boeing-7-industrial-stocks-second-half-2022-51656715998?siteid=yhoof2&yptr=yahoo