3D Printing: Can We Print Some Stability?

Industrial bellwether and newsletter portfolio holding General Electric’s acquisition of two European 3D printing companies has brought the budding technology back to the fore of investor’s minds. Let’s take a look at some of the major players in the space as well as how the market may develop in coming years. By Kris Rosemann 3D printing may have once seemed like a technology we would only see in a futuristic sci-fi movie, but it is now a reality and has been so for some time. Though it will inevitably revolutionize the $12 trillion global manufacturing market and is one of the highest growth potential areas, plenty of questions remain surrounding the foundation of the industry that continues to be laid, … Read more

Alcoa Continues Swoon, Revises Aerospace 2016 Outlook to 6%-8% Expansion

Image Source: Boeing; image source: Alcoa Alcoa (AA) kicked off first-quarter 2016 earnings season April 12, but nobody reading our work should have much interest in shares. Our $10 fair value estimate for the company explains the lack of opportunity, and we laid in out in no uncertain terms in April 2015 that we thought, “The Time to Consider Owning Alcoa Has Passed.” Even a few months before that write-up, we said the aluminum giant was trading at a peak multiple on peak earnings, a classic valuation “no-no,” and since that time, shares of Alcoa have fallen more than 40%, “Alcoa Kicks Off Fourth Quarter (2014) Earnings Season:” From our Jan 13, 2015 article: Would we ever considering owning Alcoa … Read more

Part I: Nelson’s Evaluation of Berkshire’s 2015 Annual Report

Image Source: Fortune Live Media By Brian Nelson, CFA It’s always fun to crack open the Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A, BRK.B) annual report, this year’s 2015. It reminds me of how much times have changed. For one, if Warren Buffett had been starting out in the investment business today, he simply wouldn’t have had a chance. The front page of this year’s Berkshire Hathaway shareholder letter shows that he trailed the market 33% of the time in the first 6 years in business (1965-1970), and the company lost half of its market value in 1974. Very few fund managers today, if any at all, that lose half of their market value in one year, trailing the market by 22 percentage points … Read more

Moody’s Puts Oil & Gas and Mining Sectors on Review

By Kris Rosemann On January 22, Moody’s placed 120 oil and gas companies (XLE) from across the globe on review for a credit rating downgrade. The list ranges from massive global producers such as Royal Dutch Shell (RDS.A, RDS.B) and Total (TOT) to nearly 70 US exploration and production and services (“E&P”) companies. It also includes 55 mining companies (XLB) that have been punished by the recent rout in commodity prices. Alcoa (AA), Rio Tinto (RIO) and Vale (VALE) are a few notables that made the list for a potential downgrade. The news is not completely unexpected, however, and may likely be a response to several executive teams pointing to legacy (outdated) counterparty/customer ratings as reasons to not be concerned … Read more

Alcoa Disappoints in Third Quarter, China Weakness Prevalent

Alcoa (AA) no longer is the industrial bellwether it once was as the global economy migrates more toward a service orientation, but the aluminum giant still has its hands in a lot of end markets. The company’s third-quarter results, released October 8, showed revenue falling 11% on a year-over-year basis, and modest net income of $0.07 per share, excluding special items. Acquisition and divestitures muddied the waters, but the general take was a negative one. The company is doing the best it can to migrate away from the volatility of its lower-margin operations, focusing its efforts on value-add operations, and while it is making progress, the company remains tied to the broader economic environment and the pricing pressures that inevitably … Read more

Aerospace and Automotive Demand Powering Most Industrials

Air travel growth and pent-up demand from delayed auto sales due to the Great Recession have provided a boom in spending within the commercial aerospace and automotive industries in recent years, respectively. The ever-increasing global population continues to be a driving force behind the expansion and adaptation of power end markets, and innovative solutions to meet growing global energy demand will continue to be a source of growth for industrials despite fluctuations in the energy-price markets. Such drivers in part have propelled the underlying performance of industrial giants GE (GE) and Honeywell (HON), among others. Winners and Losers Are Developing in Commercial Aerospace We expect commercial aircraft production and deliveries to continue to increase for at least the next three … Read more

The Time to Consider Owning Alcoa Has Passed

Image Source: aushiker First-quarter earnings season is already upon us, with aluminum giant Alcoa (AA) kicking things off April 8. If there is one thing investors should know about Alcoa, buying the company’s equity nearly 7 years into an economic recovery is fraught with capital risk. No matter how much Alcoa’s business shifts to value-add from commodity-type metal, core demand will always be cyclical. There were a lot of good numbers in the Alcoa report. Revenue grew 7% thanks to organic expansion in automotive and aerospace, while net income came in at $0.28 per share. After-tax operating income of $191 million was a record for its ‘Engineered Products and Solutions’ division, while the same measure in its ‘Alumina’ segment doubled … Read more

Alcoa Kicks Off Fourth Quarter Earnings Season

Would we ever considering owning Alcoa (AA) near a cyclical peak in economic demand, roughly 5-7 years into one of the strongest stock-market recoveries in history, or said differently, in the current environment? The short answer is: No. Market veterans know that the time to consider buying Alcoa is at a cyclical trough, not at peaks, and only then if there is no tangible risk of default. Alcoa may not be as much of an economic bellwether as it once was when the US was a much larger manufacturer of goods, but the aluminum giant is still relevant in assessing underlying demand trends in various end markets across the globe. The lightweight metal producer finds its way into just about … Read more

There’s No Space Like Aerospace

The recovery from the stock-market bottom in March 2009 has been five years in the making, but as the cyclical threat of an eventual global downturn looms, the aerospace industry is one of the few industries that we think will continue to be resilient in the face of such pressures. We expect commercial aircraft build rates to continue to climb at least through 2018. If the multi-year backlogs of unfulfilled deliveries at the large airframe makers aren’t enough, Boeing’s (BA) updated 20-year outlook for commercial aerospace demand, released June 10, was about as rosy as can be. The reason for such a long-range view has to do with the nature of aircraft building. When airframe makers build next-generation aircraft, they … Read more