Industrials

Brief Industrials: U.S. Equity Strategy: Upgrading Manufacturing Sector and more

In this briefing:

  1. U.S. Equity Strategy: Upgrading Manufacturing Sector
  2. Fujimi (5384 JP): Silicon Slow, HDD & Industrial Down in 3Q
  3. Valuetronics (VALUE SP): Trade War Uncertainty Continues, Downside Supported by Large Cash Position
  4. Double-Digit Growth Continues; OP Growth of More than 4.9% Likely for FY03/19

1. U.S. Equity Strategy: Upgrading Manufacturing Sector

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The S&P 500 continues to hover below critical resistance at its 200-day moving average while market participants remain in a wait-and-see mode for new developments on U.S.-China trade and details on the latest border security proposal. At the same time, breadth improvements have extended to our Manufacturing Sector – a welcomed sight given its cyclical nature.  We are Upgrading Manufacturing to market weight from underweight. Our cap-weighted Manufacturing Sector has steadily improved in our RSR ranks due in large part to strength in Aerospace & Defense Groups. In today’s report we highlight attractive Groups within Manufacturing and Technology..

2. Fujimi (5384 JP): Silicon Slow, HDD & Industrial Down in 3Q

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Fujimi’s sales and operating profit increased by only 1.2% and 2.3% year-on-year, respectively, in the three months to December. Sales of hard disc and industrial polishing materials declined. Sales of silicon wafer lapping and polishing materials, and CMP slurry, continued to rise, but at slower rates than in 2Q.

Full-year FY Mar-19 guidance was left unchanged, implying year-on-year declines in both sales and profits in 4Q. We believe that guidance is conservative, but we also expect the slowdown to continue.

At ¥2,368 (Wednesday, February 13, closing price), the shares are selling at 13.3x our EPS estimate for FY Mar-19 and 12.7x our estimate for FY Mar-20. These and other projected valuations are not at the bottom of their historical ranges, but should be low enough to support the share price as long as a U.S.-China trade deal – and, therefore, the implementation of deferred investment plans – seems likely.

3. Valuetronics (VALUE SP): Trade War Uncertainty Continues, Downside Supported by Large Cash Position

Valuetronics reported its 3Q19 figures this week which showed a 7.5% decline in revenues but a small (+2.6%) increase in bottom line profits. Stronger margins in its ICE segment offset weakness in its CE segment.

Valuetronics Holdings (VALUE SP) remains a solid company run by a good management team with interesting clients in consumer electronics and automotive. The valuation of the company is cheap (5x ex-cash 2019 P/E) and the balance sheet is rock solid.

All these positives are currently being overshadowed by the US-China trade war as the company has 100% of its production in China and does 45.7% of its sales in North-America. While many companies try to downplay the impact of the trade-war Valuetronics cannot hide and the alternatives it is working on to offset the tariff impact will surely cause short-term disruption and increased costs.

YTD the share price is +12% as the market is hoping for a positive resolution to the US-China trade war. Management is cautious on macro political improvements as trade war friction is unlikely to dissipate soon. Given the weak outlook for its CE segment and no significant new customer wins in its ICE segment risk/reward does not seem very attractive despite good dividend yield and cheap valuation.

4. Double-Digit Growth Continues; OP Growth of More than 4.9% Likely for FY03/19

  • Tsubakimoto Chain Co’s (6371 JP) 3QFY03/19 results were strong, with revenue continuing to witness double-digit growth at +13.1% YoY, although fell slightly below consensus estimates. On OP, Tsubakimoto witnessed only +5.2% YoY growth for 3Q. This was, however, above consensus and our estimates.
  • Nine-months cumulative figures look attractive as well, with both revenue and OP witnessing double-digit growth rates at 13.2% YoY and 16.0% YoY respectively as of The company’s revenue continues to trend upwards in a healthy fashion, while margins managed to reach 10.1% this quarter slightly below the 10.8% OPM achieved in 3Q last year.
  • A majority of revenue growth came from the company’s Materials Handling Equipment segment, which has witnessed strong recovery thanks to the recently acquired Central Conveyor Company in this segment. The growth was followed by the company’s steadily growing business segments, Chain segment and Power Transmission segment. This was true for the company’s OP as well. The Materials Handling Equipment segment continued to make operating profits this quarter, followed by the Chain segment and the Power Transmission segment. The Auto Parts segment, however, continued to witness slow growth in revenue and pressure in its margins this quarter as well.
  • Despite strong results, post-release, Tsubakimoto opened -9.9% down on Friday from Thursday’s close. The stock, however, rallied 8% by Tuesday’s close.

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